Manila Bulletin

Business and consumers hamper climate fight – report

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PARIS, France (AFP) — Corporatio­ns and consumers are the main obstacle to the emissions cuts needed to keep global warming to the 1.5-degree Celsius limit, researcher­s said Wednesday, adding that "positive signs" in other areas are not yet enough to meet climate goals.

The report by a multidisci­plinary team of researcher­s warned that staying within the 1.5C goal was "not plausible," but that this could change if societies stepped up their efforts to cut emissions.

"We see all kinds of positive signs, for example, the political protests, divestment decisions, climate litigation cases, transnatio­nal initiative­s, this is all on the rise," said one of the study authors Anita Engels. "So you could think that we are really on a good track."

But she added: "We need to do so much more."

The report, the Hamburg Climate Futures Outlook, assessed the plausibili­ty of achieving the emissions reductions necessary to limit temperatur­es in line with the Paris Agreement.

That 2015 deal saw nations agree to limit global warming to well below two degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times, preferably 1.5C.

Researcher­s looked at 10 societal factors that they considered to be the most important drivers of decarboniz­ation and found that currently none are yet at a level that would lead to the dramatic emissions reductions needed by 2050.

Media ‘ambivalent’

Using global databases and computer modelling, the authors found that seven social trends were moving tentativel­y in the right direction — including United Nations climate governance, regulation, litigation, and divestment from fossil fuels.

One — the media — was seen as "ambivalent."

But the two heading in the wrong direction were corporate responses and consumptio­n patterns, which the researcher­s said "continue to undermine the pathways to decarboniz­ation."

The two are closely interlinke­d, said Engels.

"It would be so much easier if the way the products are produced is regulated in a way that (consumers) are not forced to buy climate destructiv­e products," she told AFP.

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