1 / 20

Climate Change D McRae 14 October 09

Climate Change D McRae 14 October 09. Climate forum. Our climate is always changing and is influenced by both natural variability and human induced changes. Natural Variability Includes. The annual cycle El Nino/Southern Oscillation, Pacific Decadal Oscillation, North Atlantic Oscillation

abiola
Download Presentation

Climate Change D McRae 14 October 09

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate ChangeD McRae 14 October 09

  2. Climate forum • Our climate is always changing and is influenced by both natural variability and human induced changes

  3. Natural Variability Includes • The annual cycle • El Nino/Southern Oscillation, Pacific Decadal Oscillation, North Atlantic Oscillation • Volcanic eruptions • Fluctuations in solar output • Orbital Cycles • Ocean and Polar Ice Variations

  4. Human Influences Include • Changing land use • Changing urban climates • Anthropogenic sources of greenhouse gases (increase in CO2, methane etc = increase in temperature) • Aerosols and other pollutants

  5. Greenhouse gases • Did not arrive with the last federal election cycle • Svante Arrhenius • 1903 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry • Combined existing research on greenhouse effect (Fourier 1827) with work suggesting the burning of fossils fuels could alter the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (Hogbom 1894) to be the first to calculate greenhouse warming associated with carbon dioxide (1896) and predict possibility of man made global warming

  6. Observations of recent change

  7. Observations of recent change

  8. The future - rainfall • Already highly variable • No obvious climate change signal at present • Annual rainfall is projected to decrease by one percent by 2030 • The largest seasonal decrease (six percent) is projected for spring

  9. The future - temperature • Average annual temperature in the Gulf region has increased by 0.2oC over last decade (from 26.6oC to 26.8oC) • Projections indicate a further increase of 1.0oC by 2030 (4.4oC by 2070) • The number of hot days (>35oC) per year at Burketown is expected to increase from 102 to 138 per year by 2030 (222 per year by 2070)

  10. The future - sea level rise • A projected sea level rise by 0.8m by 2100 is currently being used by the Qld Government to inform policy e.g. Coastal Management Plan • Qld Gov is currently developing DEM for entire Qld coastline • Allow for better understanding of the impacts of sea level rise, storm surge, salt water intrusion on coastal communities

  11. The future - cyclones • Complex and area of on-going research • Some mixed results • However expected total number of cyclones to decrease but number of long lived and severe cyclones to increase

  12. Adaptation strategies • Should be focused on • Increasing long term profitability • Increasing long term sustainability (or best practice) • Increasing business and community resilience

  13. Adaptation strategies • Grazing industry • (Declining pasture quality & quantity due to increased CO2 concentration, evaporation, and decreased rainfall, difficulty supplying water to meet demand) • Changes in grazing systems from set grazing rates to more variable rotational/cell/spell grazing systems • Changes in production system • Change in species • Changes in breeding cycles • Changes in enterprise structure

  14. Adaptation strategies • Crop/horticultural industries • Variety and planting date changes • Species change • Changes in metabolism (photosynthesis, respiration, growth and tissue composition) in plants • Changes in crop management • More opportunity cropping • Increase risk of soil erosion due to higher rainfall intensity • Improvement in infrastructure

  15. Adaptation strategies • All communities • Changes in range of weeds, invasive species, pests and diseases • Management of pest and disease • Business size/structure/location • Increased public and political pressure on the use of resources • Increased frequency and intensity of fire • Water use efficiency, access to water and water management

  16. Adaptation strategies • Four key questions to finish with • What can go wrong (or right)? • How and why can it happen? • What is the likelihood of it happening? • What is the consequence of it happening? • What can we do about it?

  17. Furtherreading • Baum et al., 2009, Climate Change, health impacts and urban adaptability: Case study of Gold Coast City, Griffith University, available free at www.griffith.edu.au/urp • Sustainable tourism CRC, 2009, The impacts of climate change on Australian tourism destinations – developing adaptation and response strategies, available free at www.crctourism.com.au • Climate Q • Qld Government 2008, What is the science telling us, available at www.derm.qld.gov.au • The Rangeland Journal www.publish.csiro.au/journals/trj

More Related