The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Hot and bothered world is ‘way off’ climate goals

Hunger, floods and melting ice get worse in warmest decade

- EMILY BEAMENT

The world is “way off track” for meeting targets to curb rising temperatur­es as the signs of climate change increase, United Nations experts have warned.

A report compiled by the UN’s World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on (WMO) highlights 2019’s increasing heat, accelerati­ng sea level rises, and extreme weather – and the impact they have on people and wildlife.

Last year was the second hottest year on record for the world, with a global average temperatur­e of 1.1C above preindustr­ial levels, the WMO’s statement on the state of the global climate in 2019 confirms.

The five years from 2015-2019 were the five warmest years on record and 2010-2019 was the hottest decade since records began in the 19th Century.

Each decade since the 1980s has been hotter than any preceding decade stretching back to 1850, according to the report, which has input from national meteorolog­ical services, internatio­nal experts, scientific institutio­ns and UN agencies.

The trends continue in 2020, with the report published in the wake of the hottest January on record globally and some parts of the northern hemisphere, including Europe, experienci­ng an unusually warm winter.

Antarctica has reported new temperatur­e highs, accompanie­d by large-scale ice melt and a fracturing glacier which will have “repercussi­ons for sea level rise”, WMO secretaryg­eneral Petteri Taalas said.

This year countries are expected, under the internatio­nal Paris Agreement on climate change, to increase their action to tackle greenhouse gas emissions to prevent the worst impacts of global warming.

In a foreword to the report, UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said: “We are currently way off track to meeting either the 1.5C or 2C targets that the Paris Agreement calls for.

“This report outlines the latest science and illustrate­s the urgency for far-reaching climate action.”

Prof Taalas said: “Given that greenhouse gas levels continue to increase, the warming will continue.”

He added it was a matter of time before the world had a new record hot year – with prediction­s it will come within five years.

Alongside temperatur­e increases, rainfall changes had a major impact on several countries and sea levels were rising at an increasing pace, exposing

“Given that greenhouse gas levels continue to increase, the warming will continue. PROFESSOR PETTERI TAALAS

coastal areas and islands to a greater risk of flooding and submersion, he said.

Preliminar­y data indicate that greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere continued to rise in 2019, and carbon emissions from global fossil fuels grew 0.6% last year.

The report found record high temperatur­es from Australia to India, Japan, and Europe hit people’s health and wellbeing.

There were two major heatwaves in Europe, in June and July, with new national temperatur­e records set in the UK, where the thermomete­r hit 38.7C, as well as in Germany, the Netherland­s, Belgium, Luxembourg and France.

World hunger is on the rise again, and an estimated 22 million people were forced to leave their homes by events such as floods and storms.

The contiguous US, excluding Alaska, Hawaii and other islands, experience­d the highest 12-month rainfall on record from July 2018 to June 2019, and the country lost an estimated $20 billion (£15 billion) from flooding last year.

Drought or low rainfall hit many parts of the world, including Australia, which also saw its hottest year and hottest December on record and an exceptiona­lly long and severe season of wildfires.

 ??  ?? Polar bears have been spotted carrying their cubs on their backs, as they are forced to swim longer distances because of thinning ice.
Polar bears have been spotted carrying their cubs on their backs, as they are forced to swim longer distances because of thinning ice.

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