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Tag - Réchauffement climatique

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dimanche 1 juin 2008

Repères 01/06/08 - Scénario catastrophe pour le climat

Repères 01/06/08 - Scénario catastrophe pour le climat

Une nouvelle étude publiée jeudi par la prestigieuse revue scientifique Nature présente le pire scénario d’emballement de l’évolution du climat dans lequel la Terre pourrait perdre la totalité de ses glaces en l’espace d’une génération.

Si la température du globe continue d’augmenter, d’énormes quantités de méthane pourraient être libérées par les 10 000 gigatonnes de gaz gelé qui sont à l’heure actuelles emprisonnées dans les profondeurs des océans et le pergélisol. Le franchissement de ce seuil de basculement du climat aurait pour conséquence que le réchauffement de la planète serait alors bien pire et plus rapide que ce qu’envisagent aujourd’hui les prévisions des scientifiques...

 

Could Methane Trigger a Climate Doomsday Within a Human Lifespan?
Wired May 28, 2008

"A new paper published appearing Thursday in the prestigious scientific journal Nature presents the worst-case scenario for runaway climate change that could leave the Earth entirely ice-free within a generation.

If global temperatures continue to rise, massive amounts of methane gas could be released from the 10,000 gigaton reserves of frozen methane that are currently locked in the world's deep oceans and permafrost. Passing this climate tipping point would result in global warming that would be far worse and more rapid than scientists' current estimates.

The new paper suggests that exactly this type of cascading release of methane reserves rapidly warmed the Earth 635 million years ago, replacing an Ice Age with a period of tropical heat. The study's lead author suggests it could happen again, and fast -- not over thousands or millions of years, but possibly within a century.

"This is a major concern because it’s possible that only a little warming can unleash this trapped methane," Martin Kennedy, a professor at UC Riverside, said in a release. "Unzippering the methane reservoir could potentially warm the Earth tens of degrees, and the mechanism could be geologically very rapid."

Methane is 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas. And the frozen reserve is twice as large, by volume, as the world's known fossil fuel reserves.

Climate projections, like those produced by the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, usually look like smooth lines moving up steadily along with carbon dioxide levels, which is a reflection of the linear mathematical models that underpin the graphs. But Kennedy and other geologists, while accepting the importance of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, say that standard climate models can't account for massive climate changes that occur within decades. 

"None of this stuff is linear. It's non-linear," Kennedy said..."..."

 

Voir :

Snowball Earth termination by destabilization of equatorial permafrost methane clathrate
Martin Kennedy, David Mrofka & Chris von der Borch, Nature 453, 642-645 (29 May 2008)

 

mercredi 14 mai 2008

Repères 14/05/08 - Concentration de CO2 dans l'atmosphère - Pire que prévu

Repères 14/05/08 - Concentration de CO2 dans l'atmosphère - Pire que prévu

Le niveau de concentration de CO2 dans l'atmosphère est plus important que prévu et fait craindre que le changement climatique soit d'ores et déjà hors de contrôle, avant même que nous ayons fait quoi que ce soit pour le limiter.

 

World CO2 levels at record high, scientists warn
Guardian May 12 2008

"The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has reached a record high, according to new figures that renew fears that climate change could begin to slide out of control.

Scientists at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii say that CO2 levels in the atmosphere now stand at 387 parts per million (ppm), up almost 40% since the industrial revolution and the highest for at least the last 650,000 years...

...Scientists say the shift could indicate that the Earth is losing its natural ability to soak up billions of tons of carbon each year. Climate models assume that about half our future emissions will be re-absorbed by forests and oceans, but the new figures confirm this may be too optimistic. If more of our carbon pollution stays in the atmosphere, it means emissions will have to be cut by more than currently projected to prevent dangerous levels of global warming.

Martin Parry, co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's working group on impacts, said: "Despite all the talk, the situation is getting worse. Levels of greenhouse gases continue to rise in the atmosphere and the rate of that rise is accelerating. We are already seeing the impacts of climate change and the scale of those impacts will also accelerate, until we decide to do something about it."

 

Ice cores reveal climate secrets
Nature 14 May 2008

"The amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere is higher than an any other point in the past 800,000 years.

Greenhouse-gas concentrations are higher today than they have been at any point in hundreds of millennia, according to researchers who have analysed tiny air bubbles trapped in Antarctic ice that dates back 800,000 years..."

 

mardi 22 avril 2008

Repères 22/04/08 - La crise climatique menace la sécurité internationale

Repères 22/04/08 - La crise climatique menace la sécurité internationale

INTERVIEW-Climate change can stoke Africa conflicts-scientist
Reuters April 22

"ACCRA, April 22 (Reuters) - Climate change in Africa could leave 250 million more people short of water by 2020, spurring conflicts and threatening stability on the world's poorest continent, the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize winner said on Tuesday.

Rajendra K. Pachauri, chairman of the United Nations panel of climate experts who shared the prize with former U.S. Vice-President Al Gore last year, said the responsibility lay with wealthy developed nations to curb their carbon emissions.

"If the situation in Africa is a scar on the conscience of the world, then if the world has a conscience it has to remove that scar," Pachauri told Reuters in an interview.

"Reasons of equity and ethics clearly require that developed countries must do more and there is also an issue of enlightened self interest because you cannot have a large continent like Africa being neglected," he added, speaking on the sidelines of a U.N. trade and development conference in Ghana.

The Indian scientist warned that Africa's 1 billion people were among the most at risk from climate change because of the existing environmental pressures on the continent caused by lack of food and water, desertification and flash flooding.

"Unfortunately, the impact of climate is going to be most likely so harmful that it would threaten governments," he said.

"With water scarcity, the threat of conflict and the threat of competition for scarce resources will grow substantially and all of these are incompatible with good governance."..."

 

Food crisis threatens security, says UN chief
The Guardian, Monday April 21 2008

"The UN secretary general issued a gloomy warning yesterday that the deepening global food crisis, in which rapidly rising prices have triggered riots and threatened hunger in dozens of countries, could have grave implications for international security, economic growth and social progress.

Ban Ki-moon told a trade and development conference in Accra, Ghana, that the surge in prices of basic foodstuffs like cereals since last year could cancel out progress made towards meeting the UN's Millennium Development Goal of halving world poverty by 2015.

"If not handled properly, this crisis could result in a cascade of others ... and become a multidimensional problem affecting economic growth, social progress and even political security around the world," Ban told the conference..."

 

samedi 19 avril 2008

Repères 19/04/08 - Le pergélisol sibérien commence à dégeler et à libérer une nouvelle bombe climatique

Repères 19/04/08 - Le pergélisol sibérien commence à dégeler et à libérer une nouvelle bombe climatique

A Storehouse of Greenhouse Gases Is Opening in Sibera
spiegel 17/04/08

"Researchers have found alarming evidence that the frozen Arctic floor has started to thaw and release long-stored methane gas. The results could be a catastrophic warming of the earth, since methane is a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. But can the methane also be used as fuel?

It's always been a disturbing what-if scenario for climate researchers: Gas hydrates stored in the Arctic ocean floor -- hard clumps of ice and methane, conserved by freezing temperatures and high pressure -- could grow unstable and release massive amounts of methane into the atmosphere. Since methane is a potent greenhouse gas, more worrisome than carbon dioxide, the result would be a drastic acceleration of global warming. Until now this idea was mostly academic; scientists had warned that such a thing could happen. Now it seems more likely that it will.

Russian polar scientists have strong evidence that the first stages of melting are underway. They've studied largest shelf sea in the world, off the coast of Siberia, where the Asian continental shelf stretches across an underwater area six times the size of Germany, before falling off gently into the Arctic Ocean. The scientists are presenting their data from this remote, thinly-investigated region at the annual conference of the European Geosciences Union this week in Vienna..."

 

Le site de la Conférence European Geosciences Union :
  European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2008

 

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