It has been six years since AR4, and the
IPCC's latest Physical Science Basis Report on climate change is now available. Note this is the final draft, so there are a lot of figures to be added and presumably an aesthetic pass to make it less eye-unfriendly. It is also over 2200 pages long, so the summary for policy makers is recommended for those who don't want to dive into what is basically a textbook the size of Texas.
Some big points:
-Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, and is evident on land, sea, troposphere, and by ocean heat content. (I add that observed changes in the upper atmosphere are also consistent with this.) There have been many climate changes throughout Earth history, but as far as we know there was never one with the rapidity that we are seeing now. This isn't surprising; atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations have never changed this rapidly.
-The human influence on current climate change is
clear. It is
extremely likely that human activity has been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century. (Note: ‘extremely likely’ means 95 to 100% confidence). This is an increase from the ~90% confidence level in AR4.
-Globally averaged land/ocean surface temperature, calculated by linear trend, shows a warming of 0.65 to 1.06°C, median of 0.85°C, since pre-industrial times. As far as the goal of keeping temperature rise below 2°C goes, we're almost half way there by temperature, and a lot closer than that by emissions / time-frame.
-Slight change in estimates of climate sensitivity. The new range is 1.5 to 4.5°C temperature rise for a doubling of CO2, compared to the previous estimate of 2 to 4.5°C, with the most likely value unchanged at 3°C. This reflects new estimates across the lower range of sensitivity. Also, the likelihood of values below 1°C and above 6°C have been cut dramatically. Contrary to some media claims; 1.5°C as the new lower bound should not be reassuring -- it still yields >2°C temperature rise by 2100 across a broad range of emissions scenarios. This level of warming is unacceptable by international agreement. The upper limit of 4.5°C for sensitivity is also just as likely as the lower limit, and under the same emissions scenarios would be disastrous for us.
-Evidence of changes in extreme weather: daily max/min temps, heavy precipitation events, heat waves, etc. Nothing too surprising here since AR4/SREX.
-Ocean warming accounts for >90% of energy accumulated in the last 3 decades, with 60% being in the top 700 meters.
-It is about as likely as not that rate of heat uptake in oceans was slower in the last decade than the one prior, but it is unlikely that there was any change in the lower layers, where interannual variability is smaller. What this means is that media reports of global warming having slowed down or paused this last decade are not supported by evidence. What is happening is a slowdown of surface/tropospheric temperature rise as heat is being transferred to the deep ocean, combined with reduced solar luminosity during this deep solar minimum. Similar slowdowns, and speedups, can be seen in the past, and will continue in the future, and are simple consequences of natural variability.
-Ice sheets globally are losing mass, and it is very likely that the Greenland Ice sheet’s mass loss rate has accelerated. It is likely that the Greenland Ice Sheet will disappear, on a timescale of millenia, if global temperature rises above some threshold between 1 and 4 degrees warmer than pre-industrial levels. What this means is that we may find ourselves being committed to the irreversible loss of Greenland's ice, and the many meters of long term sea level rise that comes with that, if we do not act very soon.
-There is high confidence that climate change is affecting permafrost, leading to increased polar methane emissions. This is quite a nasty feedback effect, as methane is a very efficient greenhouse gas.
-There are many lines of evidence showing substantial Arctic warming since the mid 20th century, in agreement with climate model predictions and the ice-albedo feedback effect.
-Quantification of sea level rise and updated projections for the future.
-Improved climate modelling since AR4, and with greater spatial resolution. (woo!)
-The net climate feedback from all types of clouds is likely positive. (I thought this was a little surprising).
-Improved understanding of carbon cycle feedbacks.
Much more.
edit: Huh, I thought I had put a link to the report in this post. Fixed.