By Environment Correspondent Alex Kirby
A draft report on the probable impacts of climate change, written by the world's leading climate scientists, carries a stark warning - that the world may be in for some nasty shocks.
BBC News Online has seen a summary of the report, which was prepared by the members of Working Group Two of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the authoritative group containing many of the world's most respected climatologists.
The report, entitled "Climate change: Impacts, adaptation and vulnerability", is undergoing expert review and is unlikely to be published for some months.
Pulling the trigger
In its most disturbing section, it deals with the subject of thresholds. These are levels of environmental disruption or pollution below which no observable effect occurs. However, exceeding the threshold can trigger major climatic changes in short periods of time.
Acknowledging the incorporation of such thresholds in some climate models, the authors write: "In climate change, thresholds have been proposed which are much more worrying than this. Below the threshold there may be some impacts, but they will be smoothly varying with the change in the climate. Above the threshold something really nasty may happen.
Examples that have been given include the instability of the thermohaline circulation that drives warmer water to the North Atlantic and the collapse of the west Antarctic ice sheet.
If the warm waters of the Gulf Stream ceased to flow, the British Isles would be plunged into severe winters.
The authors say other surprises could include the release of methane - a potent greenhouse gas - from frozen gas hydrates trapped in permafrost.
Best-laid plans
They go out of their way to warn that unpredictable impacts of climate change could have unforeseeable consequences. "Surprises can make even the most careful calculation of impacts way off the mark."
And they say the speed at which the climate heats up is crucial.
"Non-linear systems, when rapidly forced, are particularly subject to unexpected behaviour. A fast rate of change is likely to generate more 'surprises' which inhibit the effective adaptation of both natural and managed systems."
The report includes a number of more detailed impact assessments for particular sectors: