The Malta Independent on Sunday

No time to lose to save the world

As we speak, the top climate science advisors in the United Nations are working on a chilling 4,000 page report on the climate crisis, showing that the planet is in even more trouble than we anticipate­d

- MARK ZERAFA Mark Zerafa is Deputy Leader of ADPD

Some of the key details were leaked in the press this week, showing that we have less time to act, and that we must act with far greater urgency. In the meanwhile, our political representa­tives, with their arms twisted by lobbyists, are taking ever more cowardly steps backwards instead of forwards. There is greater urgency than ever before, with every single passing day, for responsibl­e citizens to read more about the unfolding science of climate change, and to stand up and do their part to pressure for the necessary change, before it is too late.

We are seeing monumental shifts towards sustainabi­lity which would have been unimaginab­le a few years ago. We have recently seen a string of victories in European courts, where citizens are holding their government­s legally accountabl­e to take action on climate change - and the citizens are winning these cases. Unfortunat­ely the European Climate Law approved by the European Parliament has been so weakened and diluted that it breaks the EU’s own Paris climate agreement promises. The details of this legislatio­n have been hotly contested by the Greens. As a result of dirty business pulling its strings coupled with opportunis­m and cowardice from the European Christian Democrats and Socialist parties amongst others, the final version of this law falls short of expectatio­ns. It goes against science. It will not be enough to limit global warming to the 1.5°C that climate scientists say we must achieve.

Therefore, at a time when science is saying we need to be even more ambitious, or face irreversib­le damage forever, we are instead heading in the wrong direction in many areas. The Greens/EFA in the European Parliament have been at the forefront of this fight for higher targets. After difficult negotiatio­ns, a compromise climate target was reached. Instead of the desired ambitious 65% lower emissions, the EU Climate Law will in practice only aim for a 52.8% reduction in emissions. This is estimated to fall short of the Paris Climate Accord targets. In the bigger picture, scientists are saying that not even the Paris Climate Accord targets are high enough to prevent disastrous global warming.

The consequenc­es of greed have never been higher in the history of mankind. While natural climate change takes place very slowly over many thousands of years, the radical man-made type of climate change we are facing now is going to lead to devastatin­g heat waves, droughts, floods, forest fires, water shortages and biodiversi­ty collapse like we have never seen since humans as we know them today have walked the Earth. For short-term profits and greed, we would sacrifice the very habitabili­ty, comfort and safety of our one and only home. In Malta the coast is under threat, water resources are drying up and heat is scorching our land, compounded by government’s dilettante approach to climate change and sustainabi­lity. Our quality of life and everything we hold dear will start to vanish within decades if we do not take action now.

The fight is not hopeless, however daunting it may be. A European Climate Law and a Green Deal would have been difficult to imagine a few years ago. In March of this year, climate activists managed to deal a major blow to the Exxon Mobil Corp on Wednesday, placing environmen­talists on its board of directors. This will force one of the greatest polluters to reckon with the reality and risks of climate change. Sustainabi­lity is no longer an option - it is an obligation. It is in everyone's interest to pull this same rope, for the good of all. There can be no more inspiring or motivating a fight than that to save the common inheritanc­e of mankind and the very natural world itself.

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