Taranaki Daily News

Jobs versus ‘collapse of civilisati­ons’

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As leaders attending the UN’s annual climate summit heard fresh warnings about the dire consequenc­es of leaving global warming unchecked, a new issue emerged yesterday as a pressing concern: how to persuade millions of workers their industry can’t have a future if humanity is to have one.

Hosting the talks in the heart of its coal region of Silesia, Poland tried to set the tone for the two-week meeting by promoting the idea of a ‘‘just transition’’ for miners and other workers facing layoffs as countries adopt alternativ­e energy sources.

‘‘We are trying to save the world from annihilati­on, but we must do this in a way that those who live with us today in the world have the best possible living conditions,’’ Polish President Andrzej Duda said. ‘‘Otherwise they will say, ‘We don’t want such policy.’’’

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres issued a dramatic appeal to leaders yesterday to take the threat of global warming seriously, calling it ‘‘the most important issue we face.’’

‘‘Even as we witness devastatin­g climate impacts causing havoc across the world, we are still not doing enough, nor moving fast enough, to prevent irreversib­le and catastroph­ic climate disruption,’’ Guterres told delegates from almost 200 countries.

Famed British naturalist Sir David Attenborou­gh echoed his warnings, telling the gathering that the ‘‘collapse of our civilisati­ons and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizons’’ if no urgent action is taking against global warming.

The 92-year-old TV presenter blamed humans for the ‘‘disaster of global scale, our greatest threat in thousands of years.’’

Without naming specific countries, Guterres chided the nations most responsibl­e for greenhouse gas emissions for failing to do enough to meet the goals set in Paris. –AP

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