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Climate report a key to world emissions agreement in Bali

Despite concern among scientists that politics have watered it down in distillation, the synthesis is expected to add urgency to next month's emissions meeting in Indonesia.

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The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere needed to hold sea-level rise to a minimum "is basically where we are right now," says Ronald Stouffer, a researcher and a member of the synthesis report's core writing team. But global average temperatures today do not yet reflect "in any way, shape, or form, the amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere," he says, because of the inertia in the climate system.

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Trends in carbon-dioxide emissions hint at the tough job that awaits negotiators heading for Nasu Dua, Indonesia next month. A team of government and university scientists from Australia, the US, Britain, France, and Austria reported in late October that between 2000 and 2006, carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere grew at the fastest rate since monitoring began in 1959. Some two-thirds of the increase comes from industrial emissions and deforestation, the researchers note. But, they add, another 18 percent can be traced to oceans and plants, which are becoming less efficient at soaking up CO2. Computer models the IPCC uses to track Earth's natural carbon cycle have projected a slowdown in CO2 uptake by oceans and plants. According to the team, the slowdown is larger and is coming earlier than models project. CO2 concentrations are at their highest level in at least 650,000 years and likely the last 2 million years, the team noted.

Criticism that the IPCC process is too political often comes from conservative groups. They argue that the worriers have hijacked the IPCC process, leading to a litany of gloomy scenarios.

However, concern about politics and the IPCC process also comes from some scientists, who argue that because the IPCC operates by consensus among the political delegations who must approve the reports the scientists produce, the reports may understate the challenges humanity faces from global warming.

The reports, which appear every five to six years, represent a snapshot of the science that is now about two years old, notes Dominique Bachelet, an associate professor in the biological and ecological engineering department at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Ore. "The climate is changing so fast," and while the authors are writing and assembling the reports, "science is moving on."

The synthesis report and its progenitors serve as a highly useful baseline, she says, "but it's a conservative baseline."

Despite the challenges, the UN's Mr. Ban says he remains optimistic that countries can agree. "I'm encouraged by the level of political will.... I look forward to China and the US to play a more constructive role" at Bali. "Both can lead."

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