Miami Herald

The magic 1.5: What’s behind climate talks’ key elusive goal

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN

One phrase, really just a number, dominates climate talks in Glasgow, Scotland: The magic and elusive 1.5.

That stands for the internatio­nal goal of trying to limit future warming to 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit since pre-industrial times. It’s a somewhat confusing number in some ways that wasn’t a major part of negotiatio­ns just seven years ago and was a political suggestion that later proved to be incredibly important scientific­ally.

Stopping warming at 1.5 or so can avoid or at least lessen some of the most catastroph­ic future climate change harms and for some people is a lifeor-death matter, scientists have found in many reports.

The 1.5 figure now it is the “overarchin­g objective” of the Glasgow climate talks, called COP26, conference President Alok Sharma said on the first day of the conference.

Then on Saturday he said the conference, which takes a break on Sunday, was still trying “to keep 1.5 alive.”

For protesters and activists, the phrase is “1.5 to stay alive.”

And 1.5 is closer than it sounds. That’s because it may sound like another 1.5 degrees from now but because it is since preindustr­ial times, it’s actually only 0.7 degrees Fahrenheit from now. The world has warmed 2 degrees Fahrenheit) since preindustr­ial times.

The issue isn’t about the one year when the world first averages 1.5 more than pre-industrial times. Scientists usually mean a multiyear average of over 1.5 because temperatur­es — while rising over the long term like on an escalator — do have small jags up and down above the long-term trend, much like taking a step up or down on the escalator.

But it’s coming fast. Scientists calculate carbon pollution the burning of fossil fuels can produce before 1.5 degrees is baked in. A report a few days ago from Global Carbon Project found that there’s 420 billion tons of carbon dioxide left in that budget and this year humanity spewed 36.4 billion tons. That’s about 11 years worth left at

current levels — which are rising not falling — [the report found.

To get there, scientists and the United Nations say the world needs to cut its current emissions by about half as of 2030. That’s one of the three goals the U.N. has set for success in Glasgow.

“It’s physically possible [to limit warming to 1.5 degrees], but I think it is close to politicall­y impossible in the real world barring miracles,” Columbia University climate scientist Adam Sobel said. “Of course we should not give up advocating for it.”

A dozen other climate scientists told The Associated Press essentiall­y the same thing —– that if dramatic emission reductions start immediatel­y the world can keep within 1.5 degrees. But they don’t see signs of that happening.

That 1.5 figure may be the big number now but that’s not how it started.

At the insistence of small island nations who said it was a matter of survival, 1.5 was put in near the end of negotiatio­ns into the historic 2015 Paris climate agreement. It is mentioned only once in the deal’s text. And that part lists the primary goal to limit warming to “2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the temperatur­e increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.”

The 2-degree goal was the existing goal from 2009’s failed Copenhagen conference. The goal was initially interprete­d as 2 degrees or substantia­lly lower if possible.

But in a way both the “1.5 and 2 degree C thresholds are somewhat arbitrary,” Stanford University climate scientist Rob Jackson said in an email. “Every tenth of a degree matters!”

The 2 degrees was chosen because it “is the warmest temperatur­e that you can infer that the planet has ever seen in the last million years or so,” University of East Anglia climate scientist Corinne LeQuere, who helped write

the carbon budget study, said at the Glasgow climate talks.

When the Paris agreement threw in the 1.5 figure, the United Nations tasked its Nobel Prizewinni­ng group of scientists —– the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC — to study on what difference there would be an Earth between 1.5 degrees of warming and 2 degrees of warming.

The 2018 IPCC report found that compared to 2 degrees, stopping warming at 1.5 would mean:

Fewer deaths and illnesses from heat, smog and infectious diseases.

Half as many people would suffer from lack of water.

Some coral reefs may survive.

There’s less chance for summers without sea ice in the Arctic.

The West Antarctic ice sheet might not kick into irreversib­le melting.

Seas would rise nearly 4 inches less.

Half as many animals with back bones and plants would lose the majority of their habitats.

There would be substantia­lly fewer heat waves, downpours and droughts.

“For some people this is a life-or-death situation without a doubt,” report lead author Cornell University climate scientist

Natalie Mahowald said at the time.

That finding that there’s a massive difference to Earth with far less damage at 1.5 is the biggest climate science finding in the last six years, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research Director Johan Rockstrom said in an interview at the Glasgow conference.

“It gets worse and worse as you exceed beyond 1.5,” Rockstrom said. “We have more scientific evidence than ever that we need to really aim for landing at

1.5, which is the safe climate planetary boundary.”

“Once we pass 1.5 we enter a scientific danger zone in terms of heightened risk,” Rockstrom said.

In a new IPCC report in August, the world hit 1.5 in the 2030s in each of the four main carbon emissions scenarios they looked out.

Even when scientists and politician­s talk about 1.5 they usually talk about “overshoot” in which for a decade or so the temperatur­e hits or passes 1.5, but then goes back down usually with some kind of technology that sucks carbon out of the air, Stanford’s Jackson and others said.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG Getty Images ?? Climate change activists read mock newspapers Sunday in George Square, Glasgow, Scotland, Su in support of victims of oil exploratio­n and against fossil fuel investment­s in Africa during the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference.
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG Getty Images Climate change activists read mock newspapers Sunday in George Square, Glasgow, Scotland, Su in support of victims of oil exploratio­n and against fossil fuel investment­s in Africa during the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference.

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