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Estimating the global risk of anthropogenic climate change

handle: 11336/158048
The three recent Special Reports of the IPCC provide an opportunity to understand overarching climate risk, as they cover a wide diversity of risks to natural and human systems. Here we develop a scoring system to translate qualitative IPCC risk assessments into risk scores that, when aggregated, describe global risk from climate change. By the end of this century, global climate risk will increase substantially with greenhouse gas emissions compared to today (composite risk score increase of two- and fourfold under RCP2.6 and RCP8.5, respectively). Comparison of risk levels under +1.5 degrees C and +2 degrees C suggests that every additional 0.5 degrees C of global warming will contribute to higher risk globally (by about a third). Societal adaptation has the potential to decrease global climate risk substantially (by about half) under all RCPs, but cannot fully prevent residual risks from increasing (by one-third under RCP2.6 and doubling under RCP8.5, compared to today).Different frameworks, most notably expert assessments from the IPCC, have been developed to determine risk from climate change over this century. Estimated risk scores quantified from the IPCC assessments show a substantial increase in global composite risk by 2100 for low and high emissions.
- Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation Monaco
- Sorbonne Paris Cité France
- National Scientific and Technical Research Council Argentina
- Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres Germany
- University of Queensland Australia
CLIMATE CHANGE, HUMAN AND NATURAL SYSTEMS, IPCC REPORTS, https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1.5, RISK ASSESSMENT, https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1
CLIMATE CHANGE, HUMAN AND NATURAL SYSTEMS, IPCC REPORTS, https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1.5, RISK ASSESSMENT, https://purl.org/becyt/ford/1
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