Daily Record

APOCALYPSE NOW

UN expert sounds dire warning on climate chaos

- BY EMILY BEAMENT

HUMAN activities are causing a “descent towards chaos”, the head of the UN has warned as he called for action to combat the climate crisis.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said people were waging war on nature and that making peace with the natural world “must be the top, top priority for everyone, everywhere”.

In a speech at Columbia University in New York, he said the world was facing a devastatin­g pandemic, new highs of global heating, new lows of ecological degradatio­n and the “state of the planet is broken”.

He said: “Humanity is waging war on nature. This is suicidal. Nature always strikes back – and it is already doing so with growing force and fury.”

He point ed to a million species at risk of extinction, the loss of forests and wetlands, plastic pollution in the oceans, millions of deaths a year from air and water pollution, and the emergence of more diseases from animals. He highlighte­d two new reports from UN bodies which he said showed how close the world is to “climate catastroph­e”. A report from the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on shows 2020 is one of the three hottest years on record, with increasing­ly extreme weather as climate change continues. Guterres said “apocalypti­c fires and floods, cyclones and hurricanes are increasing­ly the new normal”. He added: “The fallout of the assault on our planet is impeding our efforts to eliminate poverty and imperillin­g food security. “And it is making our work for peace even more difficult, as the disruption­s drive instabilit­y, displaceme­nt and conflict.” A report from the Uni ted Nat i o n s WAR FOOTING Antonio Guterres

Environmen­t Programme and research organisati­ons has warned that fossil fuel production needs to fall by six per cent every year to 2030 to curb global warming to 1.5C, the threshold above which the worst impacts of climate change are expected.

But countries are planning to increase their production of oil, gas and coal.

Guterres said: “Let’s be clear – human activities are at the root of our descent toward chaos.

“But that means human action can help solve it. Making peace with nature is the defining task of the 21st century. It must be the top, top priority for everyone, everywhere.”

He said the recovery from the pandemic was an opportunit­y to “f lick the ‘green switch’,” and transform the world economy so it was sustainabl­e and powered by renewables, creating new jobs and cleaner infrastruc­ture.

He added: “In overcoming the pandemic, we can also avert climate cataclysm and restore our planet.”

Guterres called for a price on carbon, for fossil fuel finance to be phased out and subsidies ended, and for countries to stop building new coal power plants, as well as action on emissions from shipping and flights.

He urged countries to deliver on long standing pledges to provide £75billion a year in support for poorer nations to cope with climate change.

Alongside climate action, he called for more ambition and greater commitment to protect nature, with more conservati­on areas, phasing out harmful subsidies and i mplementin­g sustainabl­e agricultur­e and fisheries.

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 ??  ?? POLLUTION Continued use of fossil fuels is driving rising temperatur­es. Picture: PA
POLLUTION Continued use of fossil fuels is driving rising temperatur­es. Picture: PA

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