Climate Change Crib Sheet For NEWS
Climate Change Crib Sheet For NEWS
Climate Change Crib Sheet For NEWS
This briefing note is intended to help inform your reporting by providing a quick guide to the science,
editorial policy considerations and the BBC’s Greener Broadcasting strategy as well as outlining some
common misconceptions.
“It is extremely likely that human influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming
since the mid-20th century.” - IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report
This statement comes from a 2014 report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) which drew on the expertise of a huge number of the world’s top scientists. It assessed the
scientific evidence of climate change and concluded that the most recent warming is man-made. It
remains the most recent comprehensive survey of both science and policy and is due to be updated
later this year.
The IPCC forecasts a range of possible scenarios based on computer modelling. Most simulations
indicate a global surface temperature change by the end of the 21st century and that this is very
likely to exceed 1.5C, relative to 1850. Some models suggested we are on course to exceed 2C
compared to the pre-industrial average. Most climate scientists regard a rise of 2C as the point when
global warming could become irreversible and the effects dangerous. At current rates, we are on
track for a rise of more than 3-4C by the end of the century.
See: What is climate change? BBC News online and Common Misconceptions (at end of this briefing)
IMPLICATIONS
The impact of climate change in the long-term is difficult to predict but there is a general consensus
that it could be devasting in many different ways. Some predict impacts on everything from food
supplies to financial and security infrastructure.
As we wait for the sixth IPCC assessment, a leading specialist website CarbonBrief has provided a
summary of the first study to compare the impact of reaching 1.5C vs 2C. The study, published in
Earth System Dynamics in April 2016, predicts:
• At 1.5C: Sea-levels will have risen by 40cm in 2100 compared to 2000, 90% of the coral reef
is at risk of bleaching from 2050 and wheat production could be down 9% relative to 1986-
2005
• At 2C: Sea-level will rise by 50cm, the risk of coral bleaching increases to 98% and wheat
production could be down 16%.
In some areas, rising levels of carbon dioxide and a slight rise in temperatures may benefit some
forms of agriculture. Yields in a few crops may increase, but above certain temperatures, and with
water becoming scarcer, those yields are then predicted to fall later this century.
EDITORIAL POLICY
Climate Change has been a difficult subject for the BBC, and we get coverage of it wrong too often.
The climate science community is clear that humans have changed the climate, but specifically how
is more difficult to evidence. For instance, there is very high confidence that there will be more
extreme events – floods, droughts, heatwaves etc. – but attributing an individual event, such as the
UK’s winter floods in 2013/2014, to climate change is much less certain.
We must also be careful to distinguish between the statements. For example: “Climate change
makes this kind of event both more frequent and more severe,” and “Climate change caused this
event”. The former uses previous scientific evidence to say ‘it is likely’ the event is the result of
climate change, whereas the latter may be making an assertion without the proof to back it up.
However, the pledges by governments in 2015 would still see global temperatures rise by at least
2.7C above pre-industrial times by 2100. A further obstacle is America and President Trump’s plan to
withdraw from the Paris deal. The United States cannot pull out until November 2020 (after the next
US presidential election) but because the deal is voluntary, the US can simply do nothing.
While these issues are not seen as a reason for the Paris agreement to unravel, other countries like
China may now choose to act more slowly as a result. The Paris Agreement lays out a roadmap for
accelerating progress, which is being discussed at COP24 in Katowice in December 2018.