Key Takeaways
What is climate change?
Climate change refers to long-term changes in temperatures (i.e. global warming) and weather patterns. The earth’s climate has changed throughout history, so the phenomenon is not new. What is new is the speed and magnitude of change recorded over recent decades.
According to the United Nations (UN), the average temperature of the earth’s surface is now ~1.1°C higher than it was before the industrial revolution and the highest in the last 100,000 years. The decade between 2011 and 2020 was the warmest on record, and each of the last four decades has been warmer than any previous decade since 1850. Moreover, July 2023 was by far the hottest July on record and likely the hottest it has been in 120,000 years.
According to the UN, there is overwhelming scientific evidence that climate change over the last two centuries is man made.
How does it manifest itself?
Beyond an increasing average temperature of the earth’s surface, climate change manifests itself in many other ways. For example, over the last four decades the global mean sea surface temperature has increased by ~0.6°C – according to NASA, around 9/10th of global warming is occurring in the oceans. Increasing ocean temperatures have been linked to increasing hurricane intensity, while rising temperature levels generally have accelerated the melting of polar ice caps, resulting in rising sea levels (these have risen by more than 20 cm since 1880), and of glaciers in the mountain ranges of the world.
Changing weather patterns are also reflected in changing global patterns of precipitation, for example in less frequent but more intense rainfall, and wind patterns, both in terms of direction and speed. The impact of climate change will vary across regions or even local areas.
According to the Met Office climate change can also explain the rise in more intense and frequent warm spells and fall in more intense and frequent cold spells in the UK. Central England temperatures have risen markedly since records began in the 1880s. The linkage to heavy rains, dry spells and storms remains inconclusive though.
What are the consequences globally?
Consequences include:
What are the consequences in the UK?
According to the UK Government Actuary’s Department, the net effect of temperature change on excess mortality – that is the number of deaths above what would be expected under ‘normal’ conditions – so far has been negative, with lower excess deaths as a result of milder winters more than offsetting higher excess deaths as a result of hotter summers.
Why does it matter?
Climate change is one of the biggest challenges facing societies in the UK and elsewhere. Climate change has been rapid over recent decades and is, if anything, expected to accelerate in the decades ahead, with potentially significant adverse consequences for the UK. Local councils need to prepare for these inevitable changes and will need to make their contribution to slow down climate change.
If you would like to find out more about the topics discussed in this factsheet and how we might be able to help you with ESG reporting, please talk to us.
Suggested further reading
(external links, accessed 26 January 2024)
What is climate change? (United Nations)
The physical science basis (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)
July 2023 hottest month ever recorded (Scientific American, July 2023)
Climate change (EU Copernicus Climate Change Service)
Global land temperature anomalies 1850- (US National Centers for Environmental Information)
Climate Change Indicators: Sea Surface Temperature (US Environmental Protection Agency)
Sea levels (US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
Ocean temperatures and hurricane intensity (University of Southampton)
Effects of Climate Change (UK Met Office)
Overall effect of temperature change on mortality (UK Government Actuary’s Department, 2023)