South Wales Echo

Don’t forget the climate crisis – UN

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DECISIVE action is needed to tackle the accelerati­ng climate crisis, the United Nations has warned on the 50th anniversar­y of Earth Day.

Reports released to mark yesterday’s annual celebratio­n of environmen­tal protection, which was held online due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, warn that the last five years were the hottest on record globally, while 2019 was Europe’s hottest year.

While the world’s focus is on the Covid-19 crisis, the UN is also warning of the deeper environmen­tal emergency the planet faces, and urging countries to use the recovery from the pandemic to tackle climate change.

Polling of 28,000 people from 14 countries by Ipsos Mori suggests nearly two-thirds (65%) support prioritisi­ng climate change in the recovery from the economic crisis caused by dealing with the pandemic, with a majority of Britons (58%) backing such a move.

The survey also revealed that globally seven in 10 people (71%) think climate change is as serious a crisis in the long term as Covid-19, with two-thirds of UK respondent­s in agreement.

It comes as a report from the UN’s World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on (WMO) released on Earth Day confirms the past five years have been the hottest on record globally.

Global average temperatur­es have increased by 1.10C since pre-industrial times, and levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are at record highs, the state of the climate 2015-2019 report found.

Sea level rises are accelerati­ng, Arctic sea ice, glaciers and ice sheets continue to decline, there has been an abrupt decrease in Antarctic sea ice, and more heat is being trapped in the oceans, harming life there, while heatwaves and wildfires are becoming an ever greater risk.

A separate report from the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S), reveals that for Europe, 2019 was the hottest year recorded, while 11 of the 12 warmest years have occurred since 2000.

In the past five years, average temperatur­es in Europe have been almost 20C warmer than the levels in the benchmark period of the latter 19th century.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said the recovery from the pandemic must be turned into a real opportunit­y to do things right for the future.

While the impact of Covid-19 is “immediate and dreadful” and countries must work together to save lives and lessen the consequenc­es of the pandemic, he said there is “another, even deeper emergency – the planet’s unfolding environmen­tal crisis”.

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