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1250
1250 =
an interim target for methane levels,
thus 1250 parts per billion methane
in the atmosphere.
This is a complement to the “350” idea, and thus
the group 1250 is meant to form a complement to
Bill McKibben’s 350 group, but focusing more on
near-term concerns.
Dr. Robert Watson, Chair of IPCC (1997-2002)
We need to get moving to cool the planet's
temperature. Methane is the most effective
place for us to start.
Robert Watson
Some differences between
“1250” and “350”:
350ppm CO2 is not achievable, physically or politically, for the near-term.
1250ppb methane, with great effort, could be fully achieved in two decades.
Achieving 350ppm CO2 will demand altering much of our economy, and
probably the engagement of major populations around the world.
Achieving 1250ppb methane demands no major change of world
economy and does not depend on full engagement of world
populations.
Further, 350 might never be achievable
unless 1250 is reached first.
“1250 is the route to 350.”
Hansen: “There seems to be a dichotomy of possible futures: either achieve strong reductions of both CO2 and CH4 emissions or both gases are likely to increase substantially.”
“There seems to be a dichotomy of possible futures: either
achieve strong reductions of both CO2 and CH4 emissions
or both gases are likely to increase substantially.”
James Hansen, Director, NASA GISS:
Dr. Michael MacCracken,
Chief Scientist for Climate Change programs,
Climate Institute, Washington, DC
In working to limit warming over next few
decades, other than geoengineering, sharply
reducing emissions of short-lived species is the
only way to reverse the ongoing increase in
radiative forcing.
Michael MacCracken
Achieving 1250 will not - and cannot -
be about methane cuts alone.
Important caveat:
Just as reaching a lower, stable level of CO2 might
depend upon getting methane under control first,
so, too, getting methane lower and under control
will demand achieving other things first.
Like what?
1250 might never be achievable unless we
rapidly move to protect the arctic.
Source: University of Alaska - Fairbanks/INE, 2007
The arctic could emit quantities of methane
(and CO2) that dwarf human emissions.
Thus, just as 1250 is the route to 350, protecting
the arctic will be necessary to achieving 1250.
Methane
The greenhouse gas that looks both ways -
towards opportunity and danger.
Thus, 1250 is a group focused on
building policy around near-term climate needs.
It is centered around the concept that methane
levels can become central to short-term climate,
especially at times of climate change.
....other than geoengineering, sharply reducing
emissions of short-lived species is the only
way.....
Again, MacCracken -
“short-lived species” or SLCPs =
mostly, methane and black carbon cuts
(with additional advantages from cuts
to HFCs, VOCs, CO, etc.)
Last year, Hillary Clinton announced the forming
of the CCAC, or Climate and Clean Air Coalition
Its goals were formed around the
findings of the recent UNEP Assessment,
and it has become a part of UNEP itself.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
Does this create conflict with attempts
to reduce CO2 emissions?
No!
“It would be better if all climate forcings were not
packaged together and made interchangeable with CO2 in
mitigation strategies.”
“Sources of different gases are usually independent and
greater progress is likely from complementary focused
programmes.”
James Hansen
Thus, we quickly need to rethink climate:
we need both a near-term strategy
and a long-term strategy
how to keep radiative forcing as low as possible
how to avoid tipping points, especially in the arctic, from tipping
final stabilization points
revising global energy and reshaping economic systems
What we need are some leaders who will really lead, and some
creative approaches that will entice those fearing moving forward.
Michael MacCracken
The UNEP Assessment, 2011:
black carbon and ozone are its targets,
but since methane is a prime ozone precursor,
methane reductions are central to the
assessment.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
The climate mitigation impacts of the CH4 measures are the
most certain because there is a high degree of confidence in
the warming effects of this greenhouse gas.
Many CH4 measures are cost-effective and its recovery is, in
many cases, economically profitable.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
Then why isn’t this happening already?
Some reasons include:
• Lack of understanding of the outsized value of methane.
• Lack of widespread appreciation of the need for fast
action to cool the planet quickly.
• Little understanding, even in the air regulatory
community, much less the general public, of the value of
methane reductions in reducing background global ozone.
Global Methane Initiative Concept :
A Fast Action Plan for Methane Abatement, 2009
• Political resistance from both big CO2 emitters, and their
critics.
• Big emitters want to preserve methane action as part of a
cheap basket of offsets for CO2; and many climate
advocates would like to keep methane action contained
exclusively within Kyoto-type mechanisms, fearing also
that a focus on near-term climate forcers will distract from
the task of long-term CO2 reduction.
• Finally, lack of any alternative mechanism on the table to
advance methane reductions at a speed commensurate to
their short term value.
Global Methane Initiative Concept :
A Fast Action Plan for Methane Abatement, 2009
UNEP Assessment: when all measures are fully implemented,
warming during the 2030s relative to the present day is only
half as much as if no measures had been implemented.
In contrast, even a fairly aggressive strategy to reduce CO2
emissions under the CO2 measures scenario does little to
mitigate warming over the next 20–30 years.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
Full implementation of the identified measures would reduce
future global warming by 0.5˚C.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
There is a substantial near-term climate benefit in accelerating
implementation of the identified measures even if some of
these might eventually be adopted owing to general air-quality
and development concerns.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
The identified measures could reduce warming in the Arctic by about
0.7˚C in 2040.
This could reduce warming in the Arctic in the next 30 years by about
two-thirds compared to the projections of the Assessment’s
reference scenario.....and substantially decrease the risk of global
impacts from changes in this sensitive region, such as sea ice loss,
which affects global albedo, and permafrost melt.
United Nations Environment Program,
World Meteorological Organization, 2011
Timing and sequential ordering
can become critical
in an emergency.
Are we in an emergency today?
Yes!
If so, what is the greatest danger today?
Methane!
Eastern Siberian Shelf methane emissions now equal
all the rest of the oceans combined
N. Shakhova, I. Semiletov, 2010
deep shallow
Photo courtesy Peter Essick/National Geographic Society
“drunken” trees, from melting permafrost
Siberian Lakes
Photo: NASA/Jesse Allen
1980
2007
Sea ice extent minimum 2012
Source: New Scientist, 2010
Changes in Sea Ice Volume: Daily Volume
compared with the 1979-2000 average
Summer Sea Ice Volume:
PIOMAS estimates July- Sept
Greenland melting this summer
July 8, 2012 July 12, 2012
Could ice losses also be driving extreme weather events?
Intense downpours
in Chicago
Scorching heat
in Atlanta
Big snowstorm
in Philadelphia
Intense cold
in Europe
All show anomolous high amplitude patterns at 500 hPa
heights that tend to move slowly
Western Russia
August 1 – 8, 2010
Moscow
Russia
Ukraine
Mongolia
Kazakhstan
Carbon Monoxide (ppbv)
0 240120
© 2010 Google, TeleAtlas, Europa Technologies
NASA, NCAR, University of Toronto MOPITT
>50,000 deaths
and at the exact same time:
© 2010 Reuters/Ho New
Pakistan
August 2010
20,000,000 displaced
Campo de la Cruz, Colombia
© 2010 Reuters/Atlantico Govermment/Handout
Over two million people displaced - in an
event you never heard of until just now!
Economic costs to U.S. of drought
plus superstorm Sandy and other
extreme weather events
in 2012 alone:
Over $100 Billion
High latitude changes in 1000-500 hPa average thickness
in 2000-2010 relative to 1970-1999 averages,
divided by season
Fall Winter
Spring Summer
Francis, Vavrus: Geophysical Research Letters, 2012
Note strong
perturbation
during season
after ice is low
Fall Winter
Spring Summer
Francis, Vavrus: Geophysical Research Letters, 2012
Was superstorm Sandy’s path impacted by
sea-ice loss?
Further temperature increase
Icecaps start to melt
Tundra melts
Increased methane
Increasing
greenhouse gases
Dark ground
and oceans
absorb more
heat
Reduced albedo
Our whole society could soon find itself deeply stressed.
Further temperature increase
Icecaps start to melt
Tundra melts
Increased methane
Increasing
greenhouse gases
Dark ground
and oceans
absorb more
heat
Reduced albedo
1250 =
Twice as aggressive methane cuts as GMI or CCAC
Arctic protection program
+

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1250 Basics

  • 3. an interim target for methane levels, thus 1250 parts per billion methane in the atmosphere.
  • 4. This is a complement to the “350” idea, and thus the group 1250 is meant to form a complement to Bill McKibben’s 350 group, but focusing more on near-term concerns.
  • 5. Dr. Robert Watson, Chair of IPCC (1997-2002)
  • 6. We need to get moving to cool the planet's temperature. Methane is the most effective place for us to start. Robert Watson
  • 7. Some differences between “1250” and “350”: 350ppm CO2 is not achievable, physically or politically, for the near-term. 1250ppb methane, with great effort, could be fully achieved in two decades. Achieving 350ppm CO2 will demand altering much of our economy, and probably the engagement of major populations around the world. Achieving 1250ppb methane demands no major change of world economy and does not depend on full engagement of world populations.
  • 8. Further, 350 might never be achievable unless 1250 is reached first. “1250 is the route to 350.”
  • 9. Hansen: “There seems to be a dichotomy of possible futures: either achieve strong reductions of both CO2 and CH4 emissions or both gases are likely to increase substantially.” “There seems to be a dichotomy of possible futures: either achieve strong reductions of both CO2 and CH4 emissions or both gases are likely to increase substantially.” James Hansen, Director, NASA GISS:
  • 10. Dr. Michael MacCracken, Chief Scientist for Climate Change programs, Climate Institute, Washington, DC
  • 11. In working to limit warming over next few decades, other than geoengineering, sharply reducing emissions of short-lived species is the only way to reverse the ongoing increase in radiative forcing. Michael MacCracken
  • 12. Achieving 1250 will not - and cannot - be about methane cuts alone. Important caveat:
  • 13. Just as reaching a lower, stable level of CO2 might depend upon getting methane under control first, so, too, getting methane lower and under control will demand achieving other things first. Like what?
  • 14. 1250 might never be achievable unless we rapidly move to protect the arctic.
  • 15. Source: University of Alaska - Fairbanks/INE, 2007
  • 16. The arctic could emit quantities of methane (and CO2) that dwarf human emissions.
  • 17. Thus, just as 1250 is the route to 350, protecting the arctic will be necessary to achieving 1250.
  • 19. The greenhouse gas that looks both ways - towards opportunity and danger.
  • 20. Thus, 1250 is a group focused on building policy around near-term climate needs. It is centered around the concept that methane levels can become central to short-term climate, especially at times of climate change.
  • 21. ....other than geoengineering, sharply reducing emissions of short-lived species is the only way..... Again, MacCracken -
  • 22. “short-lived species” or SLCPs = mostly, methane and black carbon cuts (with additional advantages from cuts to HFCs, VOCs, CO, etc.)
  • 23. Last year, Hillary Clinton announced the forming of the CCAC, or Climate and Clean Air Coalition Its goals were formed around the findings of the recent UNEP Assessment, and it has become a part of UNEP itself.
  • 24. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 25. Does this create conflict with attempts to reduce CO2 emissions?
  • 26. No!
  • 27. “It would be better if all climate forcings were not packaged together and made interchangeable with CO2 in mitigation strategies.” “Sources of different gases are usually independent and greater progress is likely from complementary focused programmes.” James Hansen
  • 28. Thus, we quickly need to rethink climate: we need both a near-term strategy and a long-term strategy how to keep radiative forcing as low as possible how to avoid tipping points, especially in the arctic, from tipping final stabilization points revising global energy and reshaping economic systems
  • 29. What we need are some leaders who will really lead, and some creative approaches that will entice those fearing moving forward. Michael MacCracken
  • 30. The UNEP Assessment, 2011: black carbon and ozone are its targets, but since methane is a prime ozone precursor, methane reductions are central to the assessment.
  • 31. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 32. The climate mitigation impacts of the CH4 measures are the most certain because there is a high degree of confidence in the warming effects of this greenhouse gas. Many CH4 measures are cost-effective and its recovery is, in many cases, economically profitable. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 33. Then why isn’t this happening already?
  • 34. Some reasons include: • Lack of understanding of the outsized value of methane. • Lack of widespread appreciation of the need for fast action to cool the planet quickly. • Little understanding, even in the air regulatory community, much less the general public, of the value of methane reductions in reducing background global ozone. Global Methane Initiative Concept : A Fast Action Plan for Methane Abatement, 2009
  • 35. • Political resistance from both big CO2 emitters, and their critics. • Big emitters want to preserve methane action as part of a cheap basket of offsets for CO2; and many climate advocates would like to keep methane action contained exclusively within Kyoto-type mechanisms, fearing also that a focus on near-term climate forcers will distract from the task of long-term CO2 reduction. • Finally, lack of any alternative mechanism on the table to advance methane reductions at a speed commensurate to their short term value. Global Methane Initiative Concept : A Fast Action Plan for Methane Abatement, 2009
  • 36. UNEP Assessment: when all measures are fully implemented, warming during the 2030s relative to the present day is only half as much as if no measures had been implemented. In contrast, even a fairly aggressive strategy to reduce CO2 emissions under the CO2 measures scenario does little to mitigate warming over the next 20–30 years. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 37. Full implementation of the identified measures would reduce future global warming by 0.5˚C. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 38. There is a substantial near-term climate benefit in accelerating implementation of the identified measures even if some of these might eventually be adopted owing to general air-quality and development concerns. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 39. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 40. The identified measures could reduce warming in the Arctic by about 0.7˚C in 2040. This could reduce warming in the Arctic in the next 30 years by about two-thirds compared to the projections of the Assessment’s reference scenario.....and substantially decrease the risk of global impacts from changes in this sensitive region, such as sea ice loss, which affects global albedo, and permafrost melt. United Nations Environment Program, World Meteorological Organization, 2011
  • 41. Timing and sequential ordering can become critical in an emergency.
  • 42. Are we in an emergency today? Yes!
  • 43. If so, what is the greatest danger today? Methane!
  • 44. Eastern Siberian Shelf methane emissions now equal all the rest of the oceans combined
  • 45. N. Shakhova, I. Semiletov, 2010 deep shallow
  • 46. Photo courtesy Peter Essick/National Geographic Society “drunken” trees, from melting permafrost
  • 48. 1980
  • 49. 2007
  • 50. Sea ice extent minimum 2012
  • 51. Source: New Scientist, 2010 Changes in Sea Ice Volume: Daily Volume compared with the 1979-2000 average Summer Sea Ice Volume: PIOMAS estimates July- Sept
  • 52. Greenland melting this summer July 8, 2012 July 12, 2012
  • 53. Could ice losses also be driving extreme weather events? Intense downpours in Chicago Scorching heat in Atlanta Big snowstorm in Philadelphia Intense cold in Europe All show anomolous high amplitude patterns at 500 hPa heights that tend to move slowly
  • 54. Western Russia August 1 – 8, 2010 Moscow Russia Ukraine Mongolia Kazakhstan Carbon Monoxide (ppbv) 0 240120 © 2010 Google, TeleAtlas, Europa Technologies NASA, NCAR, University of Toronto MOPITT >50,000 deaths
  • 55. and at the exact same time:
  • 56. © 2010 Reuters/Ho New Pakistan August 2010 20,000,000 displaced
  • 57. Campo de la Cruz, Colombia © 2010 Reuters/Atlantico Govermment/Handout Over two million people displaced - in an event you never heard of until just now!
  • 58. Economic costs to U.S. of drought plus superstorm Sandy and other extreme weather events in 2012 alone: Over $100 Billion
  • 59. High latitude changes in 1000-500 hPa average thickness in 2000-2010 relative to 1970-1999 averages, divided by season Fall Winter Spring Summer Francis, Vavrus: Geophysical Research Letters, 2012 Note strong perturbation during season after ice is low
  • 60. Fall Winter Spring Summer Francis, Vavrus: Geophysical Research Letters, 2012 Was superstorm Sandy’s path impacted by sea-ice loss?
  • 61. Further temperature increase Icecaps start to melt Tundra melts Increased methane Increasing greenhouse gases Dark ground and oceans absorb more heat Reduced albedo Our whole society could soon find itself deeply stressed.
  • 62. Further temperature increase Icecaps start to melt Tundra melts Increased methane Increasing greenhouse gases Dark ground and oceans absorb more heat Reduced albedo
  • 63. 1250 = Twice as aggressive methane cuts as GMI or CCAC Arctic protection program +