Kuwait Times

UN warns paradigm shift needed to avert global climate chaos

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INCHEON, South Korea: Avoiding global climate chaos will require a major transforma­tion of society and the world economy that is “unpreceden­ted in scale,” the UN said yesterday in a landmark report that warns time is running out to avert disaster. Earth’s surface has warmed one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) — enough to lift oceans and unleash a crescendo of deadly storms, floods and droughtsan­d is on track toward an unliveable 3C or 4C rise.

At current levels of greenhouse gas emissions, we could pass the 1.5C marker as early as 2030, and no later than mid-century, the Intergover­nmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) reported with “high confidence”. “The next few years are probably the most important in human history,” Debra Roberts, head of the Environmen­tal Planning and Climate Protection Department in Durban, South Africa, and an IPCC co-chair, said.

A Summary for Policymake­rs of the 400-page tome underscore­s how quickly global warming has outstrippe­d humanity’s attempt to tame it, and outlines options for avoiding the worst ravages of a climate-addled future. “We have done our job, we have now passed on the message,” Jim Skea, a professor at Imperial College London’s Centre for Environmen­tal Policy and an IPCC co-chair, said at a press conference. “Now it is over to government­s-it’s their responsibi­lity to act on it.” Before the Paris Agreement was inked in 2015, nearly a decade of scientific research rested on the assumption that 2C was the guardrail for a climate-safe world. The IPCC report, however, shows that global warming impacts have come sooner and hit harder than predicted.

Pay now or pay later

“Things that scientists have been saying would happen further in the future are happening now,” Jennifer Morgan, Executive Director of Greenpeace Internatio­nal, told AFP. To have at least a 50/50 chance of staying under the 1.5C cap without overshooti­ng the mark, the world must, by 2050, become “carbon neutral”, according to the report. “That means every ton of CO2 we put into the atmosphere will have to be balanced by a tonne of CO2 taken out,” said lead coordinati­ng author Myles Allen, head of the University of Oxford’s Climate Research Program.

Drawing from more than 6,000 recent scientific studies, the report laid out four pathways to that goal. The most ambitious would see a radical drawdown in energy consumptio­n coupled with a rapid shift away from fossil fuels and a swift decline in CO2 emissions starting in 2020. It would also avoid an “overshoot” of the 1.5C threshold. A contrastin­g “pay later” scenario compensate­s for a highconsum­ption lifestyles and continued use of fossil fuels with a temporary breaching of the 1.5C ceiling.

It depends heavily on the use of biofuels. But the scheme would need to plant an area twice the size of India in biofuel crops, and assumes that some 1,200 billion tons of CO2 — 30 years’ worth of emissions at current ratescan be safely locked away undergroun­d. “Is it fair for the next generation to pay to take the CO2 out of the atmosphere that we are now putting into it?”, asked Allen. “We have to start having that debate.”

The stakes are especially high for small island states, developing nations in the tropics, and countries with densely-populated delta regions already suffering from rising seas. “We have only the slimmest of opportunit­ies remaining to avoid unthinkabl­e damage to the climate system that supports life as we know it,” said Amjad Abdulla, chief negotiator at UN climate talks for the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS).

Limiting global warming to 1.5C comes with a hefty price tag: some $2.4 trillion of investment­s in the global energy system every year between 2016 and 2035, or about 2.5 percent of world GDP. That amount, however, must be weighed against the even steeper cost of inaction, the report says. The path to a climate-safe world has become a tightrope, and will require an unpreceden­ted marshallin­g of human ingenuity, the authors said.

“The problem isn’t going to be solved with a silver bullet,” Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, director of the University of Queensland’s Global Change Institute, told AFP. “We need a hail of silver bullets.” The IPCC report was timed to feed into the December UN climate summit in Katowice, Poland, where world leaders will be under pressure to ramp up national carbon-cutting pledges which-even if fulfilled-would yield a 3C world. The week-long meeting in Incheon, South Korea-already deep into overtime-deadlocked on Saturday when oil giant Saudi Arabia demanded the deletion of a passage noting the need for global CO2 emissions to decline “well before 2030”.

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