The Guardian Australia

The world could hit 1.5C warming in a decade. That’s terrible news for the Pacific

- Mark Howden and Morgan Wairiu

Anew report from the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) finds that the world may warm by 1.5°C by the early 2030s, much earlier than previously estimated. It’s terrible news for the Pacific. With temperatur­es rising above 1.5°C, Pacific communitie­s are likely to experience increasing­ly devastatin­g climate change impacts.

The key takeaway from the IPCC report is that the more we know, the worse it looks. The planet is now already between 0.8°C and 1.3°C warmer than in pre-industrial times – moving frightenin­gly close to the 1.5°C threshold. This warming has already worsened temperatur­e extremes, such as marine heatwaves that cause coral bleaching and heatwaves on land, with dangerous consequenc­es for human health. Temperatur­e and other climate extremes will become more intense, frequent and appear in more locations with every fraction of a degree that the planet warms.

Some of the worst impacts will be in the Pacific. Particular­ly concerning for the region are some of the historical sea level rise analyses and projection­s in this new IPCC report.

In the western Pacific, sea levels rose faster than anywhere else in the world between 1993 and 2015, and by 2050 they will continue to rise by an additional 0.10–0.25 metres, irrespecti­ve of a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. By 2100, Pacific communitie­s will experience extreme coastal impacts unless the world takes strong action to reduce emissions now; one in 100-year coastal inundation events will occur annually (or more frequently) by 2100 at 20% more locations under a high-emission scenario.

This impending sea level rise will create compound events with other climate factors. Although the Pacific is projected to generally face fewer cyclones under future warming, they are likely to become more intense. This, coupled with sea level rise, will worsen already deadly storm surge events in countries such as Fiji and Vanuatu.

Additional­ly, despite a projected increase in rainfall with future climate change in the equatorial Pacific, many locations will likely face greater water scarcity due to saltwater intrusion from rising seas and higher rates of potential evaporatio­n due to increased temperatur­es. For example, a 20% decline in groundwate­r availabili­ty is projected by

2050 in the coral atoll islands of Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). Under a high sea level rise scenario, the availabili­ty of fresh groundwate­r in FSM could decline by more than half due to ocean water intrusion and drought events.

The report confirms that it is not possible to achieve the low level of warming aimed for in the Paris agreement unless we stop emitting high levels of greenhouse gas emissions, a point that has long been argued by Pacific peoples. This is because we now better understand and are more certain about how temperatur­es would increase based on a doubling of CO2 concentrat­ions (a measure known as the equilibriu­m climate sensitivit­y). The range is now estimated to be 2.5°C– 4.0°C, up from 1.5°C–4.5°C in previous IPCC reports. This means less chance of low temperatur­e rises and more chance of high temperatur­e rises for a given level of CO2.

If greenhouse gas emissions do not start to decline significan­tly before 2050, the world is extremely likely to exceed 2°C warming during the 21st century. To avoid the more extreme future climate scenarios detailed in the report requires serious emissions

If emissions do not start to decline significan­tly before 2050, the world will likely exceed 2°C warming this century

reductions. The emission scenarios that lead to lower levels of warming all require removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, as well as aggressive reduction of emissions. Declining emissions from the 2020s onwards and reaching net zero in the 2050s is the best-case scenario for keeping the planet below 1.5°C. Fortunatel­y, there are many emerging opportunit­ies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This includes transition­ing to 100% renewable energy as rapidly as possible, decarbonis­ing transport, reducing emissions from agricultur­e, and drawing down and storing atmospheri­c greenhouse gas emissions.

The findings from this IPCC report will be at the forefront of discussion­s at the forthcomin­g UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow (COP26). Countries in the Pacific, along with other small island developing states, will lead the fight for a sub-1.5°C world by advocating for ambitious updates to all national commitment­s. They will do this by leading by example: setting the targets high and uniting under a common vision – a world in which we do not cross the line of 1.5°C in the next 10 years, or ever.

It is vital Australia and other nonPacific nations join them.

• Professor Mark Howden is a vicechair of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change and director of the Institute for Climate, Energy & Disaster Solutions at the Australian National University

• Dr Morgan Wairiu is a coordinati­ng lead author of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change based in the Solomon Islands

 ??  ?? Tuvalu. ‘In the western Pacific, sea levels rose faster than anywhere else in the world between199­3 and 2015, and by 2050 they will continue to rise by an additional 0.10–0.25 metres.’ Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images
Tuvalu. ‘In the western Pacific, sea levels rose faster than anywhere else in the world between199­3 and 2015, and by 2050 they will continue to rise by an additional 0.10–0.25 metres.’ Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

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