Weekend Herald

UN warning ahead of climate talks

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The world’s nations must urgently ramp up commitment­s to cut planetwarm­ing carbon emissions to avoid “human tragedy”, the United Nations warned yesterday.

As they stand, these commitment­s — which do not kick in until 2020 — would still allow average global temperatur­es to climb as high as 3.4C by the end of the century, a recipe for massive climate damage, the UN Environmen­t Programme ( UNEP) said in its annual Emissions Gap report.

“If we don’t start taking additional action now, beginning with the upcoming climate meeting in Marrakesh, we will grieve over the avoidable human tragedy,” said UNEP head Erik Solheim.

UN climate negotiator­s from 196 countries — tasked with implementi­ng the landmark Paris climate pact which came into force yesterday — gather in the Moroccan city next week.

“The growing number of climate refugees hit by hunger, poverty, illness and conflict will be a constant reminder of our failure to deliver,” Solheim said in a statement.

The UNEP report tracks the socalled global carbon budget — the total amount of greenhouse gases humanity can add to the atmosphere without pushing temperatur­es above the threshold of destructiv­e global warming.

Going into the Paris climate summit last December, that red line had been set at 2C above pre- industrial era levels.

But a maelstrom of climateenh­anced natural disasters — including deadly storm surges, droughts, floods and wildfires — prompted nations to lower the danger threshold to “well below” 2C, and even 1.5C if possible.

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