Leo gets good marks for climate science
We asked our friend Prof Richard Betts, Chair in Climate Impacts at the University of Exeter and lead author on the IPCC’s (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) 4th and 5th Assessment Report, to give us an expert opinion on the crucial parts of Leonardo diCaprio’s Oscar Speech.
Leonardo DiCaprio’s Oscar acceptance speech calling for action on climate change has received a lot of attention. Celebrities who are passionate about stopping climate change often quote science, but this can be risky for a non-expert when it’s such a complex topic, and some carry it off better than others.
So, how did DiCaprio do?
I’ve taken a close look at the part of his speech that focussed on climate change, and I think he did rather well.
“Making The Revenant was about man’s relationship to the natural world. A world that we collectively felt in 2015 as the hottest year in recorded history.”
A good start; 2015 was very clearly the hottest year in all the datasets of global average surface temperature, by a long way. It was not the hottest year in the whole 4.5 billion year history of the Earth, but DiCaprio is careful to say “recorded history”. It’s the hottest since we started actively measuring temperatures.
“Our production needed to move to the southern tip of this planet just to be able to find snow”
Hmmm. Personally I’d have stayed well away from this example. It’s perfectly true that northern hemisphere snow cover has been in decline for some decades, but linking specific weather events or even individual seasons to long-term climate change is quite involved. There are an increasing number of studies that look at the changing probabilities of particular weather events or extreme seasons, so in some cases we are able to make links with climate change, but I’m not aware of a specific study for the winter of 2014/15 in Western Canada yet.
“Climate change is real”
Yes, absolutely. I assume he means human-caused climate change. The greenhouse effect is without doubt a real thing, increase carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases will therefore cause warming, and the increase in carbon dioxide is definitely caused by humans. There is no serious disputing of these facts, even from climate sceptics (at least, not the ones who have looked into it properly). The latest assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was that it is “extremely likely that human influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century.”
“It is happening right now”
Yes! Temperatures have been rising around the world, other signs of warming are also apparent. Many glaciers are shrinking, sea levels are rising (both due to melting land ice and expansion of water as it warms), and Arctic sea ice is in decline. Although Antarctic sea ice has increased, this is still less than the loss in the Arctic. Signs of the onset of spring, such as flowers blooming, trees coming in to leaf, birds migrating and eggs hatching, are on the whole occurring earlier in the year than several decades ago. Some (but not all) types of extreme weather event are becoming more frequent or severe, and this may well extend to other extremes in coming decades. The average rate of warming at the surface did slow temporarily for a few years, but while there is an interesting academic debate over this ‘hiatus’ or ‘slowdown’, this does not affect the big picture because the long-term heating up of the climate system is still ongoing. So yes, there is overwhelming evidence that climate change is happening.
“It is the most urgent threat facing our entire species”
There’s a lot to unpick here, and it depends to some extent on what he means by “threat” – does he mean a threat of impacts that are unpleasant but not actually life-threatening, or is he going further than that and implying a threat to the actual survival of our species? If the latter then I would not agree – I don’t see convincing evidence that the entire human race is going to be wiped out by climate change any time soon. Having said that, inexorable warming could ultimately take temperatures past tolerable limits in some areas. One climate modelling study suggested that the “wet bulb temperature” (which factors in humidity) could eventually exceed a proposed human body tolerance limit of 35°C across wide regions of the world – if the planet warmed by 12°C. This is not at all likely this century, and is at the upper end of what might be reached in a couple of centuries, if fossil fuels are burned at high rates and the climate responds as fast as is thought plausibly possible. So, it’s not the most likely outcome, and won’t happen soon, but it can’t be ruled out for the longer term. However, even if the “urgent threat” is not actually to everyone’s life, there is no doubt that everyone on the planet is increasingly at risk of being affected in some way, either directly or indirectly. Direct effects could include risks to local food or water security, or loss of homes due to coastal flooding from sea level rise. Those who do not experience these could still be affected indirectly, through shocks to the economy or pressures of migration. So yes, I do agree that every member of our species may see some impact of climate change.
“We need to stop procrastinating”
Fair point. Scientific research supports the view that the longer the delay in reducing global emissions, the harder it will be to avoid the risk of severe impacts.
“For the indigenous people of the world”
Indigenous ways of life are often dependent on particular aspects of the local environment, and in many cases these are threatened by a changing climate, especially in cold regions.
“For the billions and billions of underprivileged people out there who would be most affected by this”
Poorer people, communities and nations do often tend to be more vulnerable to environmental changes, having less capacity to adapt (e.g. less able to afford expensive sea defences). Similarly they are often more vulnerable to extreme weather and its consequences, not having such resilient infrastructure and buildings for shelter, or well-established early warning systems. Moreover, crop yields in tropical regions are expected to be hardest hit, and this is where many developing countries are. I’m not so sure about the “billions and billions” – with a world population of seven billion, rising to 9 or 10 billion by mid-century, that doesn’t leave much room for “billions and billions” who are “most affected” while others are less affect.
“For our children’s children”
This is a good way of communicating the timescale of the most severe impacts. While climate change is already happening, the highest impacts are still some way off (although we may become irreversibly committed to them soon). In particular, sea level rise takes a long while to happen to the full, as it takes time for huge bodies of ice to melt and for heat to penetrate to the ocean depths to warm and expand the deep water. Those of us alive today may well not see the worst effects, but the potentially huge impacts in the early part of the next century would be within the life expectancy of our grandchildren.
“I thank you all for this amazing award tonight. Let us not take this planet for granted. I do not take tonight for granted”
Sandwiched between two bits of awards ceremony-speak, “not taking this planet for granted” is a very good point. Earth is the only planet in our solar system suitable and comfortable for human life, and even then it has gone through some very large changes in climate in its history. And although such changes have happened before, humans were not around then, and there is no doubt that if major changes were to happen again, they could cause major upheavals to our civilisation. By tinkering with a system that we don’t yet fully understand, it could be us that make something major happen if we’re not careful. While we should not panic, we should not be complacent either. We should not take it for granted that the climate will remain within the bounds that we are used to, or that it will change gradually enough for us to keep up.
This is a great analogy and article on Leo’s speech. I really enjoy the website. Keep up the great posts.
Comment by Alfie Cain on 09/03/2016 at 12:04 pm
Hmmm,
That’ll be the Leo Di Caprio who takes private jets everywhere.
It’s good to see Richard concede that temps have been warmer in the past i.e current temps are within the range of natural variability, so we’ve got nothing to worry about.
Comment by David Smith on 19/03/2016 at 10:01 am