Off the wire
UN Security Council urges inclusion of youth in decision-making for conflict prevention  • Testimony meeting held in Tokyo to mark 78th anniv. of Nanjing Massacre  • COP21 draft agreement has "ingredients for an ambitious outcome": WWF  • Russia attempts ethnic cleansing in Syria: Turkish PM  • News Analysis: Baghdad-Ankara tension reflects deep divisions in Mideast  • 1st LD Writethru: San Bernardino shooters radicalized at least two years ago: FBI director  • 1st day of Syrian opposition talks ends in Riyadh with no agreement on Assad's future  • U.S. stocks mixed on chemical giants' potential merger  • Yemen's Saleh calls upon Arab countries to withdraw from Saudi-led coalition  • Klay Thompson:I should be back in no time  
You are here:   Home

Study warns of worse climate outlook if actions not taken

Xinhua, December 10, 2015 Adjust font size:

Global land surface temperatures might rise by an average of almost eight degrees Celsius by 2100, if significant efforts are not made to counteract climate change, according to a study published Wednesday by the University of Edinburgh.

Under a business-as-usual scenario, which assumes that there will be no significant change in people's attitudes and priorities, Earth's surface temperature is forecast to rise by 7.9 degrees Celsius over the land and by 3.6 degrees Celsius over the oceans by 2100, compared with 1750, the study warns.

In that case, it will breach the United Nations' safe limit of two degrees Celsius, beyond which the United Nations says dangerous climate change can be expected.

To carry out the study, researchers at the University of Edinburgh, first created a simple algorithm to determine the key factors shaping climate change and then estimated their likely impact on the world's land and ocean temperatures. Their work was based on historical temperatures and emissions data.

The method is more direct and straightforward than that used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which uses sophisticated, but more opaque, computer models, according to the study.

Global temperature rise has slowed in the last decade, leading some to question climate predictions of substantial 21st Century warming, but a formal test shows that the recent slowdown is part of the normal behavior of the climate system, according to the study.

"Estimates vary over the impacts of climate change, but what is now clear is that society needs to take firm, speedy action to minimize climate damage," said Roy Thompson, a Professor at the University of Edinburgh.

The study has been published in the journal Earth and Environmental Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Endit