The Jerusalem Post

Slash emissions faster, climate experts urge

Year has seen particular­ly severe weather of the type climate scientists have long warned about

- • By ALEX WHITING

BONN (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – With hurricanes, floods and other impacts of climate change becoming increasing­ly destructiv­e, countries urgently need to step up their ambitions to cut emissions if they are to keep global warming within safe limits, experts said ahead of UN climate talks starting on Monday.

About 163 countries have submitted plans on how they will contribute to meeting the Paris climate agreement goal to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

But, put together, the plans are likely to lead to a 3-degree temperatur­e increase this century, according to the United Nations.

Nicholas Nuttall, spokesman for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, said the national plans delivered in advance of Paris, “were well known at the time to fall short of the Paris Agreement’s longterm goals.”

But the agreement also calls for countries to take stock of internatio­nal progress on climate action and ratchet up the ambition of their national plans accordingl­y.

The first stock taking is set for next year, with the first more ambitious plans due in 2020.

“That will, if followed, eventually get the world on track to the goals and the aim of climate neutrality in the second half of the century,” Nuttall said.

“The UN climate conference in Bonn... needs to be a launch pad to that next ambition moment,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

This year has seen particular­ly severe weather of the type climate scientists have long warned about: severe floods in Asia, devastatin­g hurricanes in the Caribbean and United States and wildfires in California and southern Europe.

In the effort to reduce emissions and stave off worsening impacts, “we’re in a race against time,” said Angel Gurria, secretary-general of the OECD, last week.

“We have to make it stick that it’s good business to protect the environmen­t but also that it’s good policy,” he said.

As 195 nations meet starting Monday in Bonn for UN climate talks, they will be working to create rules to implement the Paris agreement, including on sometimes contentiou­s issues such as how reductions of climate-changing gases should be reported and checked by other nations.

But time is short, with global emissions of climate changing gases needing to peak by 2020 – just three years away – in order to keep warming to relatively safe levels, according to the World Resources Institute.

Camilla Born, a senior policy adviser for E3G, a London-based climate think tank said: “We are going to have to show increased ambition by 2020 if we’re going to really get on track to delivering those long-term goals.”

“This is a broader and deeper task than we’ve ever seen before. This isn’t just a conversati­on about raising targets. This is about structurin­g our economies differentl­y.

“We are moving in that direction, but we need to move there much faster,” Born told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“It’s not a done deal but we’ve got lots of ingredient­s to make that happen,” she said.

Many developing country plans to curb emissions and adapt to climate change depend on receiving enough finance to implement them.

Wealthy countries have pledged to raise $100 billion a year in climate finance by 2020 to help developing countries cope with the impacts of climate change and reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.

But more than $4 trillion is needed for developing countries to implement their plans, according to the Least Developed Countries (LDC) Group which represents the world’s poorest 47 countries.

“LDCs and other developing countries cannot take ambitious action to address climate change or protect themselves against its impacts unless all countries fulfill and outdo the pledges they have made,” said Gebru Jember Endalew, the Ethiopian chair of the group.

“[We] face the unique and unpreceden­ted challenge of lifting our people out of poverty and achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t without relying on fossil fuels,” he said.

The group is pushing for the Bonn talks to come up with more promises of cash to fund the needed changes. Least-developed countries alone, in their climate action plans, have said they need at least $200b. just to adapt to worsening climate impacts, including harsher droughts and worsening floods, Endalew said.

Not finding it will be “a serious barrier to ambitious climate action,” he said.

Many of the poorest countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and the Pacific have seen particular devastatio­n from floods, storms, droughts and rising sea levels.

With such impacts following a global temperatur­e rise of just 1.2 degrees Celsius, many poorer nations and organizati­ons representi­ng the world’s vulnerable are pushing hard to keep temperatur­e increases to not just well below 2 degrees, but to a more ambitious 1.5 degrees Celsius.

A global temperatur­e increase of 1.5 degrees is “a critical threshold which can still prevent many of the worst impacts on poor population­s,” said Sven Harmeling of CARE Internatio­nal.

The Bonn talks “must provide a clear way forward so that countries come back with more ambitious plans to cut emissions,” said Harmeling, who is head of CARE’s delegation to the talks.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A PROTESTER wearing a mask of US President Donald Trump stands along with other demonstrat­ors dressed as polar bears during a protest under the banner ‘Protect the climate – stop coal’ two days before the start of the COP 23 UN Climate Change Conference.
(Reuters) A PROTESTER wearing a mask of US President Donald Trump stands along with other demonstrat­ors dressed as polar bears during a protest under the banner ‘Protect the climate – stop coal’ two days before the start of the COP 23 UN Climate Change Conference.
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