Are we now experiencing the “new normal” climate? Let’s look at the recent evidence:
Given all of these observations and others, it is reasonable to ask “Are we now experiencing the “New Normal”?
The subtext here is the unstated conclusion that the “Old Normal” that was defined by the last two or three decades of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century is indeed broken.
We have very high confidence that this is true, and it means that decisions taken at every level must henceforth recognise that the climate is dynamic and that the future will not look like the past.
It follows that the answer to the question about the “New Normal?” questions is “NO – because each year in this decade and the next and the one after that is and will be at most a snapshot of changing climate along a trajectory that will ultimately converge to a yet to be defined “new normal”.
The National Research Council (NRC) reports two important and informative findings to explain why.
First of all, the changes in the current climate that have been observed across the planet are the products of only about 50% of the warming to which we are already committed, thanks to our past emissions of heat-trapping gases. This means that the planet would warm another 2-4 degrees Fahrenheit through the middle of this century even if concentrations of heat-trapping gases were to achieve their maximum tomorrow. This is not likely, since sustaining a specific concentration starting tomorrow would require an 80% reduction in emissions overnight.
Moreover, the NRC reported that the long-term equilibrium climate will be determined by maximum atmospheric concentrations of these heat-trapping gases. It follows that we will continue to commit ourselves to more and more warming and more and more climate change and increasingly intense and frequent extreme weather events until atmospheric concentrations have in fact been stabilised.
To summarise, what we have been experiencing recently is only the harbinger of a future that will be punctuated by more severe weather extremes and increasing damage – all driven as the future unfolds by past and future emissions of heat-trapping gases.
We are NOT seeing the “new normal”!
Gary W Yohe is Huffington Foundation Professor of Economics and Environmental Studies at Wesleyan University
This article was originally published on The Conversation – theconversation.edu.au. Reproduced with permission.
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