The Prince George Citizen

Meeting terms of UN climate deal a global challenge

- Seth BORENSTEIN

PARIS — The world is about to go on a carbon diet. It won’t be easy – or cheap.

Nearly 200 nations across the world on Saturday approved a first-of-its-kind universal agreement to wean Earth off fossil fuels and slow global warming, patting themselves on the back for showing such resolve.

On Sunday morning, like for many first day dieters, the reality sets in. The numbers – like calorie limits and hours needed in the gym – are daunting.

How daunting? Try more than 7.04 billion tons. That’s how much carbon dioxide needs to stay in the ground instead of being spewed into the atmosphere for those reductions to happen, even if you take the easier of two goals mentioned in Saturday’s deal. To get to the harder goal, it’s even larger numbers.

In the pact, the countries pledged to limit global warming to about another degree Celsius from now – and if they can, only half that.

Another, more vague, goal is that by sometime in the second half of the century, man-made greenhouse gas emissions – which includes methane and other heattrappi­ng gases as well as carbon dioxide – won’t exceed the amount that nature absorbs. Earth’s carbon cycle, which is complex and ever-changing, would have to get back to balance.

In practice, that means the world has to emit close to zero greenhouse gases by 2070 to reach the easier goal, or by 2050 to reach the harder one, said John Schellnhub­er, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.

Oh and by the way, the harder goal – limit warming by another half a degree Celsius – is probably already impossible, said Joeri Rogelj at the Internatio­nal Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria.

Most likely the best the world can hope for is overshooti­ng that temperatur­e by a few tenths of a degree and then somehow slowly – over decades if not centuries – come back to the target temperatur­e.

That may involve something called negative emissions. That’s when the world – technology and nature combined – take out more carbon dioxide from the air than humanity puts in. Nearly 90 per cent of scenarios of how to establish a safer temperatur­e in the world involves going backward on emissions, but it is also so far not very realistic, said Kevin Anderson, deputy director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in Britain.

Negative emissions involve more forests, maybe seeding the oceans, and possibly technology that sucks carbon out of the air and stores it undergroun­d somehow.

More biomass or forests require enormous land areas and direct capture of carbon from air is expensive, but with a serious sustained research effort costs can probably be brought below $100 per metric ton, said engineerin­g and policy professor Granger Morgan of Carnegie Mellon University.

Leading up to the Paris Agreement, nearly every nation formed an individual action plan to cut or at least slow the growth of carbon pollution over the next decade or so.

Richer nations that have already developed, like the United States, Europe and Japan, pledged to cut now. Developing nations that say they need fossil fuels to pull themselves out poverty pledged to slow the rate of growth for now, and to cut later.

“The EU and U.S. are all on Slim-Fast,” said Paul Bledsoe, a former Clinton administra­tion climate official. “China’s still hitting fast food, but will have to stop soon.”

China, the world’s top carbon polluter, will eventually have to make the biggest cuts.

Overall, for the world to hit its new target, global carbon dioxide emissions will have to peak by 2030, maybe earlier, and then fall to near-zero, experts said. Without any efforts to limit global warming, the world will warm by 3.5 degrees Celsius by 2100, according to Climate Interactiv­e. An activist hold a poster during a demonstrat­ion near the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Saturday during the UN Climate Change Conference. As organizers of the Paris climate talks presented what they hope is a final draft of the accord, protesters from environmen­tal and human rights groups gathered to call attention to population­s threatened by rising seas and increasing droughts and floods.

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