New Insight Into Climate Change In The Pacific
25 NOVEMBER
New research providing critical information about how climate change is affecting Australia's Pacific island neighbours and East Timor has been released today by the Australian Government’s Pacific Climate Change Science Program (PCCSP).
The landmark, peer-reviewed publication,
Climate Change in the Pacific: Scientific Assessment and New
Research, presents the most comprehensive scientific
analysis to date of climate change in the Pacific
region.
Co-editor of the report, the Bureau of Meteorology's Dr Scott Power, said the findings would be presented at an event during the 2011 United Nations Climate Change Conference being held from next week in Durban, South Africa.
"The research provides clear evidence of how the
climate has changed across this region. For example, the
past decade has been the warmest on record and ocean acidity
levels are continuing to
increase in response to rising
atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations," Dr Power
said.
According to co-editor, CSIRO’s Kevin Hennessy, the research indicates future decreases in droughts in most parts of the Pacific and decreases in the frequency of tropical cyclones by the end of the century.
"We also
expect widespread increases in extreme rainfall events,
large increases in the incidence of hot days and warm
nights, increases in the proportion of tropical
cyclones
in the more intense categories and continued sea-level rise
during this century," Mr Hennessy said.
The PCCSP has been working with national meteorological services and other partners in the Pacific to develop this climate knowledge and build the region’s capacity to undertake climate research.
Salesa Kaniaha from the Vanuatu Meteorology and
Geo-Hazard Department said prior to the release of this
research there had only been limited country-specific
climate
information available.
"This report therefore addresses a crucial need for reliable information to help Pacific countries effectively plan for climate change," Mr Kaniaha said.
The report includes climate projections for Cook Islands, East Timor, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.
Mr Hennessy also announced that information about
the future climate
of these countries would be easily
accessible via a new interactive online tool called Pacific
Climate Futures(www.pacificclimatefutures.net).
"Pacific Climate Futures allows the user to explore future changes in various aspects of the climate including temperature, rainfall, wind, sunshine and humidity for 20-year averages around 2030, 2055 and 2090 under three greenhouse gas emissions scenarios," he said.
The PCCSP is
delivered
by the Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO and managed by the
Australian Department of Climate Change and Energy
Efficiency in collaboration with AusAID as part of
Australia's five year, $328.2 million, International Climate
Change Adaptation Initiative.
Electronic versions of the
report and brochures summarising findings for each partner
country are available at:
www.pacificclimatechangescience.org
ENDS