Global Times

Climate change ‘ fast, dramatic’: US report

Americans already feeling effects of global warming, say govt agencies

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Average US temperatur­es have risen dramatical­ly and fast, with recent decades the warmest of the past 1,500 years, according to a draft federal government report cited by The New York Times on Tuesday.

“Americans are feeling the effects of climate change right now,” said the report by 13 federal agencies not yet released or approved by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

The report “directly contradict­s claims by President Trump and members of his cabinet who say that the human contributi­on to climate change is uncertain and that the ability to predict the effects is limited,” the Times said.

The draft report, part of the US National Climate Assessment, is done every four years. It has been signed by the National Academy of Sciences.

“How much more the climate will change depends on future emissions and the sensitivit­y of the climate system to those emissions,” the draft report states in the Times article.

The US just announced Friday it would still take part in internatio­nal climate change negotiatio­ns in order to protect its interests, despite its planned withdrawal from the Paris accord on global warming.

Two months after Trump announced the US would abandon the 2015 global pact, his administra­tion confirmed it had informed the United Nations of its “intent to withdraw from the Paris Agreement” – a process that will take at least until 2020.

The US is the world’s secondbigg­est producer of greenhouse gases after China and its withdrawal was seen as a body blow to the Paris agreement.

The accord commits signatorie­s to efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming, which is blamed for melting ice caps and glaciers, rising sea levels and more violent weather events.

They vowed steps to keep the worldwide rise in temperatur­es “well below” two degrees Celsius ( 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) from pre- industrial times and to “pursue efforts” to hold the increase under 1.5 C.

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