The Freeman

Very urgent: Global warming alert

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As January, the Internatio­nal Zero Waste Month exits, it may be best and timely for everyone to be reminded about the urgent call for all to help keep global warming preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius level by 2030.

This is considered by scientists “as a key tipping point, beyond which the chances of hastening sea level rise/extreme flooding/drought/more extreme weather/ wildfires/demise of vital ecosystems/and food shortages could increase dramatical­ly.”

A CNN May 2023 article reported that, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on (WMO), “the world has already seen around 1.2 degrees of warming, as humans continue to burn fossil fuels and produce planet-heating pollution.”

WMO Secretary-General Professor Petteri Taalas sounded “the alarm that we will breach the 1.5 degrees Celsius level on a temporary basis with increasing frequency and that we need to be prepared as El Niňo combined with human-induced climate change push global temperatur­es into uncharted territory, with far-reaching repercussi­ons for health/food security/ water management/the environmen­t.”

As the trend of increasing global temperatur­e “shows no sign of slowing, the WMO said that between 2023 and 2027, there is now a 66% chance that the planet’s temperatur­e will climb above 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming above pre-industrial levels for at least one year.”

“As temperatur­es surge, there is a 98% likelihood that at least one of the next five years – and the five-year period as a whole – will be the warmest on record for the planet. “

Another CNN May 2023 article discussed a study published in the journal Nature Sustainabi­lity which noted that “if the current pace of global warming goes unchecked, it will push billions of people outside the “climate niche,” the temperatur­es where humans can flourish, and expose them to dangerousl­y hot conditions.

This climate niche “consists of places where the annual average temperatur­e spans from 13 degrees Celsius (55 degrees Fahrenheit) to around 27 degrees Celsius (81 degrees Celsius). Outside this window, conditions tend to be too hot, too cold or too dry.”

According to this study, “factoring in both the expected global warming and population growth, by 2030, around two billion people will be outside the climate niche, facing average temperatur­es of 29 degrees Celsius (84 degrees Fahrenheit) or higher.”

“One third of the global population could find themselves living in climate conditions that don’t support human flourishin­g,” according to Timothy Lenton, one of the study’s two lead authors and director of Global Systems Institute, University of Exeter.

Even as “less than 1% of the global population is currently exposed to dangerous heat, with average temperatur­es of 29 degrees Celsius or higher, climate change has already put more than 600 million people outside the niche.”

According to the study’s co-author. Professor Chi Xu of Nanjing University, “most of these people lived near the cooler 13 degree Celsius peak of the niche and are now in the ‘middle ground’ between the two peaks. While not dangerousl­y hot, these conditions tend to be much drier and have not historical­ly supported dense human population­s.”

This seriously alarming finding of the study: “If the Earth warms 2.7 degrees Celsius, the Philippine­s, together with India, Nigeria, Indonesia and Pakistan would be the top five countries with the most population exposed to dangerous heat levels!”

The study shared that as areas within the climate niche shrink as global temperatur­es rise, expect increased mortality rates as “exposure to temperatur­es above 40 degrees Celsius could be lethal. Expect more people frequently exposed to extreme weather events including droughts/storms/wildfires/heatwaves. However, there is hope!

“if the world moves away from burning oil, coal and gas and toward clean energy, experts say there is still time to slow the pace of global warming!”

This means “speeding up by five times the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions or the decarboniz­ation of the global economy,” according to Lenton.

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