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PDF Versions of: The National Assessment Overview and Foundation Reports were produced by the National Assessment Synthesis Team, an advisory committee chartered under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, and were not subjected to OSTP's Information Quality Act Guidelines. The National Assessment was forwarded to the President and Congress in November 2000 for their consideration.
Many of the maps in this document are derived from the two primary climate model scenarios. In most cases, there are three maps: one shows average conditions based on actual observations from 1961-1990; the other two are generated by the Hadley and Canadian model scenarios and reflect the model's projection of change from those average conditions.
Both the emissions scenario and the human-induced warming influence assumed in this Assessment lie near the mid-range of the set of IPCC scenarios. |
What are scenarios and why are they used?Scenarios are plausible alternative futures -- each an example of what might happen under particular assumptions. Scenarios are not specific predictions or forecasts. Rather, scenarios provide a starting point for examining questions about an uncertain future and can help us visualize alternative futures in concrete and human terms. The military and industry frequently use these powerful tools for future planning in high-stakes situations. Using scenarios helps to identify vulnerabilities and plan for contingencies. Why are climate scenarios used in this Assessment and how were they developed?Because we cannot predict many aspects of our nation's future climate, we have used scenarios to help explore US vulnerability to climate change. Results from state-of-the-science climate models and data from historical observations have been used to generate a variety of such scenarios. Projections of changes in climate from the Hadley Centre in the United Kingdom and the Canadian Centre for Climate Modeling and Analysis served as the primary resources for this Assessment. Results were also drawn from models developed at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, NOAA's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, and NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
For some aspects of climate, virtually all models, as well
as other lines of evidence, agree on the types of changes to be expected.
For example, all climate models suggest that the climate is going to get
warmer, the heat index is going to rise, and precipitation is more likely
to come in heavy and extreme events. This consistency lends confidence to
these results. What assumptions about emissions are in these two climate scenarios?Because future trends in fossil fuel use and other human activities are uncertain, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has developed a set of scenarios for how the 21st century may evolve. These scenarios consider a wide range of possibilities for changes in population, economic growth, technological development, improvements in energy efficiency, and the like. The two primary climate scenarios used in this Assessment are based on one mid-range emissions scenario for the future that assumes no major changes in policies to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Some other important assumptions in this scenario are that by the year 2100:
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