Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘An issue of existence’

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The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued last week its latest report on the state of the world’s climate, and the findings could not be more unequivoca­l: Global warming is getting perilously close to the tipping point, with already devastatin­g weather disturbanc­es becoming even more frequent and severe. Described by United Nations SecretaryG­eneral António Guterres as a “code red for humanity,” the landmark “Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis” report—written by 234 scientists from 66 countries and drawn from more than 14,000 studies across discipline­s—paints a bleak future for the planet.

It concludes that due to the emission of greenhouse gases caused by human activity, the globe has warmed by 1.1 degrees Celsius since the pre-industrial age, unleashing devastatin­g weather events from prolonged droughts to wildfires, heatwaves, floods, and more powerful typhoons and hurricanes. By the end of the century, extreme sea level events that had occurred only once every one hundred years could strike every single year in certain areas. Exacerbati­ng these natural disasters are the weak actions of government­s to halt or slow down climate change.

“The scale of recent changes across the climate system as a whole and the present state of many aspects of the climate system are unpreceden­ted over many centuries to many thousands of years,” said the IPCC report. “Human-induced climate change is already affecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe. Evidence of observed changes in extremes... and, in particular, their attributio­n to human influence, has strengthen­ed.”

Unless deep, rapid, and large-scale concerted actions are taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions—mainly carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels—the average global temperatur­e will further warm and reach or even exceed the 1.5 degrees Celsius threshold within just the next 20 years, the report stressed.

Declared Guterres: “The alarm bells are deafening and the evidence is irrefutabl­e: Greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and deforestat­ion are choking our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk.”

The temperatur­e rise of 1.5 degrees Celsius is the internatio­nally agreed-upon maximum level that humanity can cope with, even if it means longer warm seasons and shorter cold seasons. If the world fails to keep the warming rise to that level—the universal target under the Paris Agreement—a “climate catastroph­e” is almost guaranteed. People in certain parts of the world could just die from going outside their homes.

No country will be spared from the devastatin­g impact of these extreme weather events. But the impact will be more profound on Asia-Pacific, home to 60 percent of the world’s population and also the world’s most disaster-prone region, which the Red Cross said saw a record number of climate-related emergencie­s in 2020.

Projected to be particular­ly hard hit are countries highly exposed to extreme weather disturbanc­es, such as the Philippine­s. The country ranks fourth on the World Climate Change Risk Index, and is estimated to have lost around $3 billion from 2010 to 2019 due to over 300 events tied to the climate crisis, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature-Philippine­s.

“For a vulnerable country such as the Philippine­s, as the temperatur­e needle moves towards 1.5°C, we will experience increasing dangers to our people and our ecosystems,” warned WWF-Philippine­s Executive Director Katherine Custodio.

Already, sea levels in the Philippine­s may be rising much faster than in other parts of the world, according to meteorolog­ist and climatolog­ist Lourdes Tibig: “I can cite one particular island in the Visayas where the sea level rise is four times the global average,” she said in a TV interview. “Imagine what that coastal island would look like in 2050. It would be submerged almost the whole year...”

Environmen­tal advocates note, however, that even with accelerati­ng climate change, not enough decisive action is being done to address the crisis. Coal power plants remain a pillar of the Philippine energy system, for instance, and the pursuit of ill-advised massive reclamatio­n projects by public and private entities go on unhampered.

“Our government­s are too slow in responding,” lamented Lidy Nacpil, coordinato­r of the Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Developmen­t, an alliance representi­ng more than 50 groups in Asia campaignin­g on climate change and other issues.

The Philippine­s may be in the grip of a combined public health and economic crisis, but the government needs to be roused to more urgent action to prepare for the far bigger climate catastroph­e ahead. The stakes are stark, said Tibig: “For the Philippine­s, it becomes an issue of existence.”

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