Το work with title Climate impacts in Europe under +1.5°C global warming by Jacob Daniela, Kotova Lola, Teichmann Claas, Sobolowski Stefan P., Vautard Robert, Donnelly Chantal A., Koutroulis Aristeidis, Gryllakis Emmanouil, Tsanis Ioannis, Damm Andrea, Sakalli, Abdulla, van Vliet Michelle T.H. is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Bibliographic Citation
D. Jacob, L. Kotova, C. Teichmann, S.P. Sobolowski, R. Vautard, C. Donnelly, A.G. Koutroulis, M.G. Grillakis, I.K. Tsanis, A. Damm, A. Sakalli and M.T.H. van Vliet, "Climate Impacts in Europe Under +1.5°C Global Warming," Earth's Future, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 264-285, Feb. 2018. doi: 10.1002/2017EF000710
https://doi.org/10.1002/2017EF000710
The Paris Agreement of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change aims not only at avoiding +2°C warming (and even limit the temperature increase further to +1.5°C), but also sets long‐term goals to guide mitigation. Therefore, the best available science is required to inform policymakers on the importance of and the adaptation needs in a +1.5°C warmer world. Seven research institutes from Europe and Turkey integrated their competencies to provide a cross‐sectoral assessment of the potential impacts at a pan‐European scale. The initial findings of this initiative are presented and key messages communicated. The approach is to select periods based on global warming thresholds rather than the more typical approach of selecting time periods (e.g., end of century). The results indicate that the world is likely to pass the +1.5°C threshold in the coming decades. Cross‐sectoral dimensions are taken into account to show the impacts of global warming that occur in parallel in more than one sector. Also, impacts differ across sectors and regions. Alongside the negative impacts for certain sectors and regions, some positive impacts are projected. Summer tourism in parts of Western Europe may be favored by climate change; electricity demand decreases outweigh increases over most of Europe and catchment yields in hydropower regions will increase. However, such positive findings should be interpreted carefully as we do not take into account exogenous factors that can and will influence Europe such as migration patterns, food production, and economic and political instability.