The Pak Banker

Scientists hopeful political leaders can meet climate goals

- NEW YORK -AP

Climate negotiator­s inserted a dramatic charge in the 2015 Paris accord, asking world leaders to strive to keep global temperatur­es at just 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Now new studies have begun to sketch out what the tighter target - compared to the longtime benchmark goal of 2 degrees (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) - actually means. Their overall message to climate envoys meeting in Bonn, Germany this week: Better get cracking.

"We would need an incredibly dramatic reduction in emissions in the very near future," said Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist with Berkeley Earth. He called the 1.5 degree target "a little ridiculous and implausibl­e." The scientific studies suggest that every year that goes by without global emissions peaking would require larger pollution cuts in the future. As it stands, the world has "room" left in the atmosphere for less than 20 years of emissions at current rates.

An essay Hausfather published on the website CarbonBrie­f estimates that if emissions peak in 2020, then by 2030, the carbon- emissions rate will have to drop by 9% a year. If the peak had come in 1995, required cuts in 2030 would have been just 2% - and off a much lower baseline.

But emissions are still rising. In 2017, they're expected to go up by 2%, according to researcher­s in the Global Carbon Project. That's much lower than rates seen in the early 21st century, but still the wrong direction.

Already, even the most optimistic scenarios can't hit a 2-degree goal without assuming that whiz-bang future technology will emerge to pull carbon dioxide out of the air. The climate models tend to show that it's unrealisti­c to reduce pollution by more than 5% or 6% a year, Hausfather said. To get around that sticking point, the models build in "negative emissions" later in the century -perhaps the most significan­t TBD of all time.

"The idea that we're going to depend on this largely unknown technology to get us to these targets is a little worrisome," Hausfather said. The world has already warmed by about 1 degree Celsius since the end of the 19th century, and there's momentum in the system. In a thought experiment, authors of a new US National Climate Assessment found that if atmospheri­c carbon dioxide stayed at its current level, that would lock in another 0.6 degrees of warming. Another study found that if all emissions magically stopped, the planet would eventually warm between 1.1 degrees to 1.5 degrees.

Veerabhadr­an Ramanathan of the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy in September envisioned an aggressive scenario in which nations yank hard on three main "levers" -zeroing out carbon emissions, slashing other greenhouse gases that don't hang in the air as long, and deploying machines that suck carbon out of smokestack­s and stick it undergroun­d. In that scenario, efforts to "bend the warming curve to a cooling trend" should begin by 2020. Negative emissions would come later. "Since 2020 is just a few years away, this is a highly optimistic option," they write, with an understate­ment characteri­stic of the climate scientists.

A June study in Earth's Future led by Xuanming Su of Japan's National Institute for Environmen­tal Studies concluded that temperatur­es could stabilize below 1.5 degrees, after shooting past it for a brief time, with immediate action including a tripling of carbon prices and doubling of funds.

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-AFP ?? Military vehicles and soldiers patrol the streets in Zimbabwe.
HARARE -AFP Military vehicles and soldiers patrol the streets in Zimbabwe.

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