Workshop

Abrupt Climate Change: Mechanisms, Early Warning Signs, Impacts, and Economic Analyses

calendar
Jul 9th, 2005 - Jul 15th, 2005
location
Aspen

This workshop centered around the recognition that human emissions of greenhouse gases were (and are) likely to lead to abrupt changes in climate, with severe, widespread ecological consequences if certain thresholds of climate are crossed. Topics of special interest included: bleaching of corals, disintegration of the West-Antarctic ice sheet, and changes in ocean circulation patterns. Discussions of abrupt change in the past were considered in forecasting abrupt changes forced by anthropogenic emissions. The workshop also considered potential early warning signs that a threshold was being approached.
Keywords: climate change and variability, paleoclimate, abrupt change, thresholds

Abrupt Climate Change: Mechanisms, Early Warning Signs, Impacts, and Economic Analyses group photo

Workshop Agenda

Expand to see available videos and presentations
Day 1July 10, 2005

10:45 am Brief Overview Presented by Gary Yohe, Michael Schlesinger, Klaus Keller

11:00 am Keynote Address: Climate Thresholds and Abrupt Climate Change: What are the Research Needs? Presented by Klaus Keller Moderated by Michael Schlesinger

1:45 pm Discussant: George Philander Presented by George Philander Moderated by Michael Schlesinger

2:30 pm Discussant: Michael Vellinga Presented by Michael Vellinga Moderated by Michael Schlesinger

3:00 pm Rapid Climate Change, the Intensity of the Atlantic MOC and High-Latitude Low-Latitude Teleconnections: Evidence from Paleoclimatology Presented by William Richard Peltier Moderated by Michael Schlesinger

3:45 pm An overlooked mechanism for abrupt climate changes Presented by George Philander Moderated by Michael Schlesinger

4:15 pm Discussant: Julia Hargreaves Presented by Julia Hargreaves Moderated by Michael Schlesinger

Workshop Outcomes

  • Confronting the Bogeyman of the Climate System

    In recent years, the topic of abrupt climate change has risen to a place of prominence in both scientific and popular discourse. The subject of abrupt climate change was addressed at a meeting held at the Aspen Global Change Institute in 2005, and the proceedings of that meeting are summarized in this article. In short, the concern among scientists is that melting freshwater could drastically impact ocean circulation, leading to an abrupt change in global climate. Such an event is believed to have occurred in the last ice age when the world may have experienced up to a 10 degree shift in temperature. However, during the AGCI meeting scientists reported on the results of climate model runs that suggest that major disruption of ocean currents is not an anticipated outcome of global warming. The general consensus of scientists by the end of the meeting was that too much focus on abrupt climate change may serve as a dangerous distraction from addressing the more realistic concerns of climate change such as sea level rise.

    View PDF

Organizers

Klaus Keller

Penn State University
Assistant Professor
starEvent Co-Chair

Michael Schlesinger

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Professor
starEvent Co-Chair

Gary Yohe

Wesleyan University
Professor Emeritus
starEvent Co-Chair

Attendees

Max Planck Institute for Meteorology
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Professor
Georgia Institute of Technology
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Oceanographer
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
Climate Communication
Climate Science Writer
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Senior Writer
RAND
Senior Scientist
University of British Columbia
Professor Emeritus
University of Toronto
Professor
Princeton University
Professor, Director of AOS Program
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
University of California, San Diego
Professor
Institute for Coastal Research
University of California, San Diego
Professor
University of Hawaii
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Program Manager
Hamburg University
Professor
Met Office Hadley Centre
Met Office Hadley Centre
Manager
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

View Historical Roster

The attendee list and participant profiles are regularly updated. For information on participant affiliation at the time of workshop, please refer to the historical roster. If you are aware of updates needed to participant or workshop records, please notify AGCI’s workshops team.