The Malta Independent on Sunday

Climate justice is our responsibi­lity too

Everyone is aware that different parts of the world are experienci­ng weather extremes. Under the heading ‘Changing climate forces desperate Guatemalan­s to emigrate’, National Geographic recently reported that “Drought and shifting weather are making it di

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The Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on and the World Food Programme of the United Nations are concerned that drought is having a considerab­le impact on the most vulnerable in Central America. It has led to a loss of 280,000 hectares of agricultur­al land in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, as a result affecting the food security of more than two million people.

We are aware, even from local experience, that drought and floods cause considerab­le damage to agricultur­e and are occurring with increasing frequency. Some countries are experienci­ng an acute lack of rain while others are experienci­ng a concentrat­ion of a year’s rainfall in the space of a few days. These changing patterns in the weather are the result of human behaviour, accumulate­d over a large number of years through everincrea­sing carbon emissions.

Clearly, climate change threatens essential resources – such as water and food – on which communitie­s depend, putting in question their very right to life. The politics of climate change, on the initiative and insistence of island states, in particular Pacific island micro-states, is currently focusing on the need to limit increases in global warming to not more than 1.5° C. There is a consensus among the global scientific community that, beyond such an increase, a climatic apocalypse would be more likely. This will be the cause of not just more drought and floods but also of an unpreceden­ted rise in sea level, as a result wiping out coastal areas and low-lying islands all around the globe.

The special report issued by the lnter-government­al Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in October explains in detail the views of the global scientific community on the current state of play: it explains the science of climate change and the future of the Earth. A total of 224 leading scientists from 40 countries have assessed 30,000 scientific papers and their conclusion­s cannot be ignored.

Its report warns that the earth has already warmed by one degree Celsius more than the pre-industrial age. If we retain the present level of activity, we are warned that the temperatur­e will rise a further half a degree before the year 2050.

This is the reason why the scientific community considers that carbon emissions must be reduced, achieving net zero emissions before the year 2050. However,

there are various pockets of resistance to attaining such an objective in a number of countries. So much that four of them (Russia, the United States, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia) have sought to water down the global consensus on the IPPC report conclusion­s in Katowice, at the climate change summit held earlier this month. Each and every country has a role in achieving this substantia­l reduction of carbon emissions, subject to the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lity. Malta also has such a responsibi­lity to contribute to a reduction in carbon emissions in order to ensure that the 1.5° C barrier is not breached.

In Malta, the switching of energy generation from one dependent on heavy fuel oil to gas was a positive step. How- ever, in the long term, this is not enough as gas is considered a transition fuel: a step on the path to energy generation completely dependent on renewable sources. We require more energy generated from the sun and wind and we also need to ensure that good use is made of energy generated from waves – so abundant in the sea around us. The applicatio­n of technology will lead to the creation of new, sustainabl­e jobs and simultaneo­usly contribute to an improvemen­t in the quality of life for everyone. Transport, however, is still a major problem considerin­g Malta’s carbon emissions due to the astronomic increase in the number of cars on our roads. Unfortunat­ely, instead of investing in sustainabl­e trans- port, the government has embarked on a massive programme of further developmen­t of the road infrastruc­ture which will only result in encouragin­g more cars on our roads. Consequent­ly, this will cancel out the progress being achieved with the registered increase in the use of public transport.

To add insult to injury, the proposed tunnel below the seabed between Malta and Gozo is essentiall­y a tunnel for the use of cars. It is estimated that, as a result of this tunnel, the vehicle movement between the two islands will increase from 3,000 to 9,000 vehicle movements daily over a 15-year period. An alternativ­e sustainabl­e service providing for the movement of people would be a fast ferry service from Gozo to the commercial centres of Malta. However, the encouragem­ent of the use of cars is central to the projected tunnel as tolls will be paid by car owners.

All this runs counter to the National Transport Master-Plan 2025 which establishe­s the reduction of cars from Maltese roads as an achievable target. Reducing the number of cars on our roads will not only improve the quality of the air we breath but will also be a small but important contributi­on to global climate justice through a reduction in carbon emission levels.

Climate justice is our responsibi­lity too.

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