Expert Warns World Warming Faster Than Expected
Mon May 13,11:29 AM ET
By Eva Sohlman
LONDON (Reuters) - Planet earth is warming up faster than
previously expected, the head of a leading climate research institute
said on Monday.
Dying forests, expanding deserts and rising sea levels would wreak havoc
to human and animal lives sooner than anticipated as global warming
(news - web sites) was accelerating, said Geoff Jenkins, head of the
Hadley Center for Climate Prediction and Research.
"It looks like it will be warmer by the end of the
century than what we have predicted," he told Reuters in an interview.
Jenkins said recent revisions showed much greater output
of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide than earlier estimated. These
gases are blamed for global warming.
Warmer weather will generate more droughts, floods and
rising sea levels which many fear will create millions of refugees from
drowning island-nations and possible wars over increasingly scarce fresh
water.
Economies are also likely to take a blow as farming, fishing
and business will be affected by the change in climate.
A 2001 United Nations (news - web sites)' report on climate
change forecast that global temperatures will rise two to five degrees
Celsius by the end of the century.
But recent data suggest temperatures could rise even higher
as a worst case scenario shows four times as much emitted CO2 in the
atmosphere from today's levels which Jenkins said is significantly higher
than previously expected.
Carbon dioxide is blamed for two thirds of all global
warming and is largely produced when burning fossil fuels such as oil
and coal.
NATURE'S DEFENSES WEAKENING
Despite efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 5.2
percent of 1990's levels during 2008-12 under a global Kyoto pact, the
amount in the atmosphere is set to rise as warmer temperatures will
curb nature's capacity to absorb the gases, Jenkins said.
Half of all CO2 emissions last in the atmosphere for about
100 years, while the rest is soaked up by seas, land and vegetation.
But the opposite effect may kick in as warmer weather
and less rainfall in some places will dry out and kill trees which emit
CO2 as they decompose, Jenkins said.
CO2-absorbing microbes in the soil are also set to boost
emissions as higher temperatures will fuel their activities which produce
the greenhouse gas.
"Instead of helping, they will make global warming
worse," Jenkins said.
He echoed a warning from the Royal Society, Britain's
national academy of science, that present measures to cut greenhouse
gases were not sufficient to avoid the worst effects of global warming.
He said temperatures in the UK could rise by seven to
eight degrees by 2080 compared with an expected four degree increase.
"We would have to cut emissions by 60-70 percent
by the end of the century to stabilize CO2 levels," Jenkins said.
The European Union (news - web sites) has said it will
ratify the Kyoto treaty this summer and if Russia and Japan also do
so the treaty can come into force without the world's largest producer
of man-made CO2 emissions -- the United States.
The U.S., which has the world's biggest economy, rejected
the pact in 2001 over worries it would harm its industry.
Source: Yahoo
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