1.15 Measured warming of Earth
Measured warming of Earth and future predictions
The 5 different IPCC scenarios in the IPCC's AR6 document essentially describe global CO2 emission reduction consequences ranging from:
CODE RED ...to... DANGER OF DEATH
Upper chart
Historical data (thin black line) shows observed global surface temperature increase in °C since 1850–1900 as a function of historical cumulative carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in GigaTonnes CO2 (GtCO2) from 1850 to 2019. The surrounding grey range shows a corresponding estimate of the historical human-caused surface warming.
Coloured areas show the assessed very likely range of global surface temperature future projections, and thick coloured central lines show the median estimate as a function of cumulative CO2 emissions from 2020 until year 2050 for the set if IPCC scenarios.
Projections use the cumulative CO2 emissions of each respective scenario, and the projected global warming includes the contribution from all anthropogenic causes. The relationship is illustrated over the domain of cumulative CO2 emissions for which there is high confidence that the Transient Climate Response to cumulative CO2 Emissions (TCRE) remains constant, and for the time period from 1850 to 2050 over which global CO2 emissions remain net positive under all illustrative scenarios as there is limited evidence supporting the quantitative application of TCRE to estimate temperature evolution under net negative CO2 emissions.
Just a 2 degree Celsius increase in average global temperatures is deemed to be a “VERY DANGEROUS BOUNDARY” line for the continuance of human civilisation on Earth. [ WE CANNOT RISK INCREASING 2˚CELSIUS ]
Lower chart
Historical and projected cumulative CO2 emissions in GigaTonnes of CO2 (GtCO2) for the 5 different respective scenarios.
Reference: IPCC_AR6_WGI_Full_Report.pdf – 9 Aug 2021 – page 6,9
Figure SPM.10: Near-linear relationship between cumulative CO2 emissions and the increase in global surface temperature.