| Literature DB >> 35914185 |
Luke Kemp1,2, Chi Xu3, Joanna Depledge4, Kristie L Ebi5, Goodwin Gibbins6, Timothy A Kohler7,8,9, Johan Rockström10, Marten Scheffer11, Hans Joachim Schellnhuber10,12, Will Steffen13, Timothy M Lenton14.
Abstract
Prudent risk management requires consideration of bad-to-worst-case scenarios. Yet, for climate change, such potential futures are poorly understood. Could anthropogenic climate change result in worldwide societal collapse or even eventual human extinction? At present, this is a dangerously underexplored topic. Yet there are ample reasons to suspect that climate change could result in a global catastrophe. Analyzing the mechanisms for these extreme consequences could help galvanize action, improve resilience, and inform policy, including emergency responses. We outline current knowledge about the likelihood of extreme climate change, discuss why understanding bad-to-worst cases is vital, articulate reasons for concern about catastrophic outcomes, define key terms, and put forward a research agenda. The proposed agenda covers four main questions: 1) What is the potential for climate change to drive mass extinction events? 2) What are the mechanisms that could result in human mass mortality and morbidity? 3) What are human societies' vulnerabilities to climate-triggered risk cascades, such as from conflict, political instability, and systemic financial risk? 4) How can these multiple strands of evidence-together with other global dangers-be usefully synthesized into an "integrated catastrophe assessment"? It is time for the scientific community to grapple with the challenge of better understanding catastrophic climate change.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropocene; Earth system trajectories; catastrophic climate change; climate change; tipping elements
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35914185 PMCID: PMC9407216 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108146119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779
Fig. 1.Overlap between future population distribution and extreme heat. CMIP6 model data [from nine GCM models available from the WorldClim database (45)] were used to calculate MAT under SSP3-7.0 during around 2070 (2060–2080) alongside Shared SSP3 demographic projections to ∼2070 (46). The shaded areas depict regions where MAT exceeds 29 °C, while the colored topography details the spread of population density.
Fig. 2.Fragile heat: the overlap between state fragility, extreme heat, and nuclear and biological catastrophic hazards. GCM model data [from the WorldClim database (45)] was used to calculate mean annual warming rates under SSP3-7.0 and SSP5-8.5. This results in a temperature rise of 2.8 °C in ∼2070 (48) for SSP3-7.0, and 3.2 °C for SSP5-8.5. The shaded areas depict regions where MAT exceeds 29 °C. These projections are overlapped with the 2021 Fragile State Index (FSI) (49). This is a necessarily rough proxy because FSI only estimates current fragility levels. While such measurements of fragility and stability are contested and have limitations, the FSI provides one of the more robust indices. This Figure also identifies the capitals of states with nuclear weapons, and the location of maximum containment Biosafety Level 4 (BS4) laboratories which handle the most dangerous pathogens in the world. These are provided as one rough proxy for nuclear and biological catastrophc hazards.
Defining key terms in the Climate Endgame agenda
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Latent risk | Risk that is dormant under one set of conditions but becomes active under another set of conditions. |
| Risk cascade | Chains of risk occurring when an adverse impact triggers a set of linked risks ( |
| Systemic risk | The potential for individual disruptions or failures to cascade into a system-wide failure. |
| Extreme climate change | Mean global surface temperature rise of 3 °C or more above preindustrial levels by 2100. |
| Extinction risk | The probability of human extinction within a given timeframe. |
| Extinction threat | A plausible and significant contributor to total extinction risk. |
| Societal fragility | The potential for smaller damages to spiral into global catastrophic or extinction risk due to societal vulnerabilities, risk cascades, and maladaptive responses. |
| Societal collapse | Significant sociopolitical fragmentation and/or state failure along with the relatively rapid, enduring, and significant loss capital, and systems identity; this can lead to large-scale increases in mortality and morbidity. |
| Global catastrophic risk | The probability of a loss of 25% of the global population and the severe disruption of global critical systems (such as food) within a given timeframe (years or decades). |
| Global catastrophic threat | A plausible and significant contributor to global catastrophic risk; the potential for climate change to be a global catastrophic threat can be referred to as “catastrophic climate change”. |
| Global decimation risk | The probability of a loss of 10% (or more) of global population and the severe disruption of global critical systems (such as food) within a given timeframe (years or decades). |
| Global decimation threat | A plausible and significant contributor to global decimation risk. |
| Endgame territory | Levels of global warming and societal fragility that are judged sufficiently probable to constitute climate change as an extinction threat. |
| Worst-case warming | The highest empirically and theoretically plausible level of global warming. |
Fig. 3.Cascading global climate failure. This is a causal loop diagram, in which a complete line represents a positive polarity (e.g., amplifying feedback; not necessarily positive in a normative sense) and a dotted line denotes a negative polarity (meaning a dampening feedback). See for further information.