The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Climate already hitting key tipping points

- MATTHEW GREEN

LONDON - “Shall we all just kill ourselves?”

It was an odd title for a comedy night, but British stand-up Carl Donnelly turned out to have chosen an environmen­tal theme with impeccable timing.

With temperatur­e records tumbling daily in last week’s European heatwave, a crowd in an east London bar seemed uniquely primed to appreciate his darkly humorous riffs on the existentia­l threat posed by climate change.

That foretaste of a radically hotter world underscore­d what is at stake in a decisive phase of talks to implement the 2015 Paris Agreement, a collective shot at avoiding climate breakdown.

With study-after-study showing climate impacts from extreme weather to polar melt and sea level rise outstrippi­ng initial forecasts, negotiator­s have a fastclosin­g window to try to turn the aspiration­s agreed in Paris into meaningful outcomes.

“There’s so much on the line in the next 18 months or so,” said Sue Reid, vice-president of climate and energy at Ceres, a U.S. non-profit group that works to steer companies and investors onto a more sustainabl­e path.

“This is a crucial period of time both for public officials and the private sector to really reverse the curve on emissions,” Reid told Reuters.

In October, the U.N.-backed Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned emissions must start falling next year at the latest to stand a chance of achieving the deal’s goal of holding the global temperatur­e rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

With emissions currently on track to push temperatur­es more than three degrees higher, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is working to wrest bigger commitment­s from government­s ahead of a summit in New York in September.

Telling world leaders that failing to cut emissions would be “suicidal,” the Portuguese diplomat wants to build momentum ahead of a fresh round of climate talks in Chile in December.

By the time Britain convenes a major follow-up summit in late 2020, plans are supposed to be underway - in theory at least - to almost halve global emissions over the next decade.

“In the next year-and-a-half we will witness an intensity of climate diplomacy not seen since the Paris Agreement was signed,” said Tessa Khan, an internatio­nal climate change lawyer and codirector of the Climate Litigation Network.

As the diplomatic offensive intensifie­s, the latest scientific studies have offered negotiator­s scant comfort.

U.S climatolog­ist Michael Mann believes emissions need to fall even more drasticall­y than the IPCC assumes since the panel may be underestim­ating how far temperatur­es have already risen since pre-industrial times.

“Our work on this indicates that we might have as much as 40% less carbon left to burn than IPCC implies, if we are to avert the 1.5 Celsius warming limit,” said Mann, director of the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvan­ia State University.

Mann has urged government­s to treat the transition to renewable energy with the equivalent urgency that drove the U.S. industrial mobilizati­on in World War Two.

So far, no major economy has taken heed.

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