Western Daily Press

PM: Time to grow up and tackle climate change

Lava slows from Spanish eruption

- GERALDINE SCOTT & ALEX BRITTON Press Associatio­n

THE advance of lava from a volcanic eruption in Spain’s Canary Islands has slowed significan­tly, raising doubts about whether it will fan out across the land and destroy more homes instead of flowing into the sea. A giant river of lava slowed to 13 feet per hour after reaching a plain on Wednesday. On Monday, a day after the eruption on the island of La Palma, it was moving at 2,300 feet per hour. As it slowed, the lava grew thicker. In places, it rose up to 50 feet high, authoritie­s said. The lava now covers 410 acres and has swallowed around 350 homes.

EARTH is not “some indestruct­ible toy” Prime Minister Boris Johnson told world leaders, as he spoke of the upcoming Glasgow COP26 summit as “the turning point for humanity”.

Mr Johnson addressed the United Nations General Assembly in the early hours of Thursday in a speech in which he conceded a rise in temperatur­es was inevitable but said we can hope to “restrain that growth”.

The address was the last stop on Mr Johnson’s visit to the United States which has seen discussion­s held on trade, the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change.

Mr Johnson told the Assembly it was time for “humanity to grow up” and look to the coronaviru­s pandemic as an example of “gloomy scientists being proved right”.

He added: “The world - this precious blue sphere with its eggshell crust and wisp of an atmosphere - is not some indestruct­ible toy, some bouncy plastic romper room against which we can hurl ourselves to our heart’s content.

“Daily, weekly, we are doing such irreversib­le damage that long before a million years are up, we will have made this beautiful planet effectivel­y uninhabita­ble - not just for us but for many other species.

“And that is why the Glasgow COP26 summit is the turning point for humanity.”

The UN summit is being held in Glasgow from late October to early November to “accelerate action towards the goals of the Paris Agreement”, a treaty aimed at keeping the rise in global temperatur­es to below 2C adopted in 2015.

The speech started with a look at how humanity has been around for around 200,000 years and that the average mammalian species exists for about a million years before it evolves or dies out - suggesting we were, in relative terms, “now sweet 16”.

He said: “We have come to that fateful age when we know roughly how to drive and we know how to unlock the drinks cabinet and to engage in all sorts of activity that is not only potentiall­y embarrassi­ng but also terminal.

“In the words of the Oxford philosophe­r Toby Ord, ‘we are just old enough to get ourselves into serious trouble’.”

Mr Johnson’s eco focus is a far cry from his past climate-sceptic views.

He admitted on Monday that “if you were to excavate some of my articles from 20 years ago you might find comments I made, obiter dicta, about climate change that weren’t entirely supportive of the current struggle, but the facts change and people change their minds and change their views and that’s very important too”. Addressing the assembly, he said he was not “one of those environmen­talists who takes a moral pleasure in excoriatin­g humanity for its excess” or viewing the green movement as “a pretext for a wholesale assault on capitalism”.

“My friends, the adolescenc­e of humanity is coming to an end,” he said.

“We are approachin­g that critical turning point, in less than two months, when we must show that we are capable of learning, and maturing, and finally taking responsibi­lity for the destructio­n we are inflicting, not just upon our planet but ourselves.”

He called on countries to cut their carbon emissions by 68% by 2030 compared with 1990 levels, praised the end of China’s internatio­nal financing of coal, and congratula­ted Pakistan’s pledge to plant 10 billion trees.

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