Gulf Today

Bill Gates’ warning on climate needs thinking

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Microsot founder Bill Gates’ statement that puting an end to the global coronaviru­s pandemic will be ‘ very, very easy’ compared to the task of addressing the climate crisis needs serious thinking.

Managing to do this, he said, would be “the most amazing thing humanity has ever done”.

Gates told the BBC: “We’ve never made a transition like we’re talking about doing in the next 30 years. There is no precedent for this.”

That Gates is according climate change top priority compared to the pandemic shows the gravity of the situation. This despite the fact that a disease such as the coronaviru­s has effects that are tangible, that can be felt, at an individual level. Compare this with global warming where the consequenc­es do not immediatel­y affect the person per se.

Many may not agree with Gates, whose statement comes at a time when the global death toll from the coronaviru­s has killed over two million. In wealthy countries including the United States, Britain, Israel, Canada and Germany, millions of citizens have already been given some measure of protection with at least one dose of vaccine developed with revolution­ary speed and quickly authorised for use.

But elsewhere, immunisati­on drives have barely goten off the ground. Many experts are predicting another year of loss and hardship in places like Iran, Mexico and Brazil, which together account for a lot of the world’s deaths.

So, can the pandemic be controlled? Well, some experts think so, such as the leading US infectious disease specialist, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who said he foresees America achieving enough collective COVID-19 immunity through vaccinatio­ns to regain “some semblance of normality” by autumn 2021, despite early setbacks in the vaccine rollout.

The problem with climate change is that there seems to be no end to it. Research suggests that even if humanity stopped emitting greenhouse gases tomorrow, earth will warm for centuries to come and oceans will rise by metres.

“According to our models, humanity is beyond the point-of-no-return when it comes to halting the melting of permafrost using greenhouse gas cuts as the single tool,” lead author Jorgen Randers, a professor emeritus of climate strategy at the BI Norwegian Business School, told AFP.

Despite his interest in helping to save the planet from climate change, Gates admited to arriving at the 2015 Paris climate summit in a private plane.

And he is candid enough to admit it. “I am aware that I’m an imperfect messenger on climate change,” he said, according to an extract of his book.

“I own big houses and fly in private planes – in fact, I took one to Paris for the climate conference, so who am I to lecture anyone on the environmen­t?”

The billionair­e has argued that government­s need to do more to help deter people from using fossil fuels.

He also suggested countries should be more transparen­t and use an economic system that prices in the real cost of using fossil fuels and the damage they are doing to the environmen­t.

Many government­s focus on using more renewable sources of energy. However Gates said these only account for 30 per cent of total carbon emissions and the business magnate raised concerns about how to decarbonis­e the other 70 per cent.

This other 70 per cent includes emissions created by transport systems and the production of steel, cement and fertiliser.

A way to solve this would be innovation on a scale the world has never before seen, he said.

He added that he remained optimistic that the world still had time to avoid the worst effects of climate change: “You know, I’ve seen many times, innovation surprises us in a positive way.”

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