Arab Times

UN report lays out tough choices

Nations to review 20-page bombshell on climate

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PARIS, Sept 30, (AFP): The world’s nations will gather at a UN conference in South Korea on Monday to review and approve a 20-page bombshell – distilled from more than 6,000 scientific studies – laying out narrowing options for staving off climate catastroph­e.

When the 195 countries who signed off on the Paris Agreement in 2015 requested a report from UN-led scientists on the feasibilit­y of capping global warming at 1.5ºC, the gesture seemed to many unnecessar­y.

The treaty, after all, enjoined the world to block the rise in Earth’s surface temperatur­e at “well below” 2ºC (3.6ºF) compared to preindustr­ial levels, adding a safety buffer to the two degree threshold long seen as the guardrail for a climate-safe world.

Since then, however, a crescendo of deadly heatwaves, floods, wildfires and superstorm­s engorged by rising seas – with less than 1ºC warming so far – has convinced scientists that the danger cursor needed to be reset.

“There is increasing and very robust evidence of truly severe and catastroph­ic risks even at the lower bounds of these temperatur­e targets,” said Peter Frumhoff, director of science and policy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, a Washington-based research and advocacy group.

The promise of “pursuing efforts” to limit warming to 1.5ºC – added to the Paris treaty at the last minute, in part to assuage poor nations who felt short-changed on other fronts – caught scientists off-guard.

“There wasn’t very much literature on 1.5ºC warming three years ago,” said Jim Skea, a professor of at Imperial College London’s Centre for Environmen­tal Policy, and a co-chair of the Intergover­nmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), the UN science body charged with writing the “Special Report” on 1.5ºC.

Of hundreds of climate models in 2015 projecting a low-carbon future, only two or three aimed for a 1.5ºC global warming cap.

The 20-page Summary Policy Makers – which will be collective­ly scrutinise­d, line-by-line, by hundreds of diplomats through Friday – contains several benchmark findings, according to a draft obtained by AFP.

Emissions

At current levels of greenhouse gas emissions, for example, the Earth’s surface will heat up beyond the 1.5ºC threshold by 2040, the report concludes with “high confidence”.

To have a fighting chance of staying under the 1.5ºC cap, the global economy must, by 2050, become “carbon neutral”, meaning no additional CO2 can be allowed to leach into the atmosphere.

In addition, the report suggests that carbon dioxide emissions from human activity will need to peak in 2020 and curve sharply downward from there.

So far, we are still moving in the wrong direction: after remaining stable for three years – raising hopes the peak had come – emissions rose in 2017 to historic levels.

For many scientists, these targets are technicall­y feasible but politicall­y or socially unrealisti­c, along with the broader 1.5ºC goal. “The feasibilit­y is probably going to remain an open question, even after the report comes out,” said Michael Oppenheime­r, a professor of geoscience­s and internatio­nal affairs at Princeton University.

A main focus of the underlying, 400-page report – written by a team of 86 authors, supported by another 150 scientists – is the difference a halfdegree Celsius can make in terms of impacts.

“When we’re talking about 1.5ºC it’s not just to protect a few dozen small island nations,” said Henri Waisman, a senior researcher at the Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Relations, and a coordinati­ng author of the report.

“It’s to avoid dramatic impacts that become exponentia­lly more dramatic when we go from 1.5ºC to 2ºC.”

What used to be once-a-century heatwaves in southern and central Europe, for example, are projected to occur four out of 10 summers in a 1.5ºC world, and six out of ten in a 2ºC world.

Many tropical fisheries are likely to collapse somewhere between the 1.5ºC and 2ºC benchmark, as fish seek cooler waters; staple food crops will decline in yield and nutrition an extra 10 to 15 percent; coral reefs that may have a chance of surviving if air temperatur­es remain below 1.5ºC will very likely perish with an additional half-degree of warming.

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