Jonathan Leake, Science Editor
Enter our Snapshots of Summer photography competition
SCIENTISTS leading global research into climate change have set out a stark vision of how the world will change if humanity fails to tackle surging greenhouse gas emissions.
A report issued yesterday by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) described how a warming world would threaten billions of people with thirst and malnutrition, endanger more than half of wildlife species with extinction and initiate a melting of the Greenland ice cap that could raise global sea levels by more than 22ft.
Such warnings have been heard before but never with so much scientific certainty. The IPCC’s report was based on 29,000 observations taken around the world and published in more than 500 peer-reviewed scientific papers.
Yesterday, Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, who unveiled the report in Valencia, Spain, said: “All humanity must now assume responsibility for climate change.”
Ban has just been on a trip to Antarctica and South America, where he saw melting glaciers and ice-shelves. He said: “I come to you humbled after seeing some of the most precious treasures of our planet threatened by humanity’s own hand.”
Yesterday Gordon Brown issued his own statement, calling on the world to “face up to the challenge of climate change”. The prime minister added: “Climate change poses an urgent challenge that threatens the environment but also international peace and security, prosperity and development.”
Brown is expected to give a keynote speech on climate change this week, recommitting Britain to supplying a fifth of its energy requirements from renewable sources from 2020. Previously government officials had said Britain would struggle to meet the target and lobbied to be allowed to used different statistics.
The IPCC report sets out a variety of climatic impacts, including likely temperature rises of up to 4C, or even 6C. It predicts that Arctic summer sea ice will disappear by 2080 and that weather patterns will change globally. Such changes could include heatwaves, droughts, an increase in heavy rain and more intense storms.
In Europe, rising temperatures could turn much of Spain, Italy and Greece into deserts. Northern Europe, including Britain, would face more floods, heatwaves and stronger storms. Much of Australia would become uninhabitable.
Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, said one of the biggest impacts would come through rising sea levels. The report said levels were already likely to rise by 15in to 55in over the next few decades because water expands as it warms.
"This is a very important finding, likely to bring major changes to coastlines, and inundating low-lying areas, with a great effect in river deltas and low-lying islands,” said Pachauri.
Over a longer period - centuries or even millennia - rising temperatures could melt the Greenland ice cap, raising sea levels by an extra 22ft.
The report was, however, not entirely bleak. It also said that humanity had the power to stave off the worst effects of global warming at relatively low cost - but only if action was taken in the next decade.
The report is designed to provide the scientific underpinning for the Bali conference on climate change, which opens on December 3.
This will involve talks between more than 180 governments over the UN climate convention and, in particular, an extension to the 1997 Kyoto Treaty, which aims to limit global greenhouse gas emissions.
Some believe it is too late to prevent catastrophe. Among them is James Lovelock, the scientist who created the Gaia hypothesis of a self-regulating Earth, which now underlies much of climate science.
In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, published this week, he suggests it is pointless to “green” society when so much damage has been done. Lovelock, 84, predicts food shortages, wars over water and land and a population crash that could leave just 500m survivors of the current population of 6.6 billion.
Nightmare vision
How scientists on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change believe Earth will be affected:
- The world has already warmed by an average 0.7C in the past century. Temperatures in polar regions have increased the fastest, with 5C rises in some areas.
- Another 1.3C of warming is inevitable because of greenhouse gases already released into the atmosphere.
- Alpine ski resorts will be left without snow and many rivers will dry up. In Africa up to 250m more people will suffer water shortages by 2020.
- Worldwide agriculture could be devastated, especially in parts of Africa and Asia where some crop yields could halve by 2020.
- Tidal flooding will increase. Global sea levels are rising by 3.1mm a year and accelerating. Most is due to warm water expansion.
- Emissions of CO2 - the main greenhouse gas - grew by 80% between 1970 and 2004. Its concentration in the atmosphere is the highest for 650,000 years.
- The amount of CO2 emitted by humans will rise by up to 90% by 2030 unless action is taken.

Win a luxury weekend to Newcastle and its neighbour Gateshead, find out more here
Risk, resilience and embracing new technology
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
Discover the power of collective thinking. Submit a solution and be in with a chance to win a Media Hub Home Entertainment System
The inside track on current trends in the charity, not for profit and social enterprise sectors
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Make the most of the summer and enter our fabulous photographic competition, you could win a £5000 holiday
Corsica is an island of beauty and contrast, an ideal holiday destination
Enjoy further reading from Travel to Fashion, Business to Sport, discover more
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
The clever way to lease a new car is with Car leasing made simple™
2009
per month on 36-month
Personal Contract Hire (PCH)
2008
42850
Car Insurance
£24,250 - £30,346
MI5
London
£60,000
The Environment Agency
Bristol
Up to £90K
Boots
Midlands
OTE £85k
Credit Protection Association
Nationwide Opportunities
Completely London
Luxury Condo's in Manhattan with NYC views
The best new homes in Wimbledon?
Nationwide
Fabulous Cruise And Cruise & Stay Offers Including Virgin Atlantic Flights Prices Start From Only £699pp!
Last Minute Cruise And Cruise & Stay Offers. Med From £499pp, Caribbean From £699pp!
5 star quality at a 3 star price.
8 fabulous Canadian cities ...you won’t find cheaper
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths | Subscriptions | E-paper
News International associated websites: Globrix Property Search | Property Finder | Milkround
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
"On page 97 of the IPCC's latest AR4 report, the authors have stated definitively that the Earth is a "sphere." Well, if that's the case, we might as well go ahead and call the Earth "flat" once again.
Scott, Durham, NC"
I think the IPCC can be forgiven for putting a reasonable and understandable simplification into their FAQs as they have done as these are meant to be accessible to the general public, unlike the dense science and data in the main parts of the AR4 report. In the context of p97, then a sphere is definitely adequate for what the IPCC is explaining. You can't seriously expect to use this simplification as a reason to question the rest of the report!
Rene Descartes, Hampshire, UK
On page 97 of the IPCC's latest AR4 report, the authors have stated definitively that the Earth is a "sphere." Well, if that's the case, we might as well go ahead and call the Earth "flat" once again.
In actuality, as presumably some scientists and certainly many schoolchildren know, the Earth is not a sphere but an oblate spheroid. If so many supposedly astute scientists (of whom just what percentage are actually climatologists?) can't even get the basic shape of the Earth correct in their latest doomsday report, how can anyone trust that they even come close to getting the science right?!
I guess as before with the NASA data, no one cares to check their facts or double check the accuracy of their reports as long as the media and the public will swallow it.
If the IPCC's attention to detail is this sloppy at the start, one can only presume it doesn't get any better. Maybe worse.
Now, just when is that predicted Ice Age coming? How many years is it now?
Scott, Durham, NC, USA
Humanity is overrated, revolution ! ? @ Ivor Duarte, Shepperton, UK, a revolution or a devolution ? Sure shame for those that will have their land turn into a desert, sorry for the millions of innocent that will perish, they weren't even aware as some 1st world pro-capitalistic countries were about global warming in the '60s (?), hah, the truth was made transparent through a revolution.
There is still time to amend the err/sin of the superpowers, over greed !
But to change we will have to tackle greed first. If you were part of a country that was going to turn into a desert and millions of your children with die, are you feeling apathy still?
The world will change with those that care, not with those that feel comfortable enough to embrace a catastrophe future, cause they might survive.
UB313, JHB, South Africa ,
It is misleading to blame the world's problems exclusively on overpopulation. Yes, of course sheer numbers will magnify the human impact on the environment, and no, of course population cannot rise indefinitely. But to blame today's problems of water-shortage, waste production, habitat-loss and climate-change on this one factor alone fails to take account of HOW we are living. 75% of global consumption and emission comes from just 25% of the population. The epitome of this has to be the developed world's expectation that every person should have a car each. The social and environmental impact of this is vastly greater than straight population numbers alone. At present there are only about 900 million motor vehicles in a world of 6.6 billion people and already this is proving unsustainable. No way could we all live like this. If the developed world would set a better example of smart but frugal living and ditch its crazy excesses, the problem would be much less urgent for all.
David Bond, Wellington, New Zealand
Well, how much do Time readers care? Little, it seems, as no-one has bothered to comment.
So, let's comment on the spectre at the feast, the problem that dare not speak its name, the crux that this article entirely omits:
Too many people
Population growth is at the root of world problems.
Water shortage ? - no, the same amount of water - too many people.
Too much waste - yes - too many people.
Excess CO2 - yes - too many people.
Wildlife extinctions, habitat loss â too many people. But only people matter of course, animals are just here for our entertainment & convenience and their habitat is ours to destroy.
Global warming - yes, but itâs a symptom of too many people.
In the UK, we can start with a two-child policy, with fiscal incentives, large families should be stigmatised. Far more important than the trivia of â4x4sâ.
We have to stop obsessing about the symptoms and get to the root cause, in this country and the world as a whole - too many people.
Ivor Duarte, Shepperton, UK
Recently on an early evening shopping trip to Canterbury, Kent, I was astounded to see a majority of the shops with their doors open, wide, directly onto the street, and a blast of hot air greeting anyone who entered. (The external temperature at the time was about 5C). How can this be ecologically sound or sensible practice? And why in these days of legislation for everything, does the Government not enforce the use of a simple, old-fashioned, closing door, so that these companies no longer directly heat the street? Perhaps they are afraid they will lose custom as a result - and the economy will suffer? But if this continues, magnified many times across the country, as I am sure it will, in the lead up to Christmas, what a waste of energy and resources! We are all being urged to take responsibility, turn down our heating by 1 degree, insulate our houses, turn off lights, yet this makes a mockery of all our efforts. Is it any wonder we feel powerless to effect any change?
carol parker, staplehurst, uk
The evidence is all around us. It is important that we all take it seriously and make the necessary changes in our lifestyles and political agendas to halt the progression and begin to reverse some of the damage that has been inflicted on the earth through human negligence. I am a proud grandmother with two gorgeous baby grandsons and I want them to inherit a world full of beauty and promise. I would like to hear from other equally concerned grandparents with a view to organising a plan of action which will get the attention of our politicians, business entrepreneurs and others in power and authority who can push through our ideas.
Barbara Saunders, Banbury, Oxon
On the other hand, most of northern Canada and Siberia will become agricultural land feeding another billion people. Grapes will grow in Britain as well as in northern Europe just as they did in several hundred years ago. There will be a lot more rain and mankind will live and grow food in higher elevation as it becomes warmer. Earth was much warmer in the past and polar bears are still here. Don't be such a gloom and doom Sayers, there is much to look forward too. When most of todayâs world was covered in ice do you think our ancestors were screaming "Stop the global warming" better yet, would you?
Drifter, vancouver, canada