The Philippine Star

Asean, Phl leaders urged to re-assess climate targets

- By JANVIC MATEO

Former senator and Climate Change Commission head Heherson Alvarez has called on policymake­rs in Southeast Asia to reassess their commitment­s to address the threat of climate change.

Alvarez issued the call following the recent release of a report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which said that current pledges by government­s are not enough to limit global temperatur­e rise to 1.5 Celsius.

“To avoid further environmen­tal catastroph­e, it is imperative that Philippine and ASEAN policymake­rs conduct appropriat­e hearings to determine if nationally determined commitment­s under the Paris climate accord are being met or derailed so that corrective measures can be taken,” said Alvarez.

He said government­s must also be prepared for the upcoming conference in Katowice, Poland this December to ensure the full implementa­tion of the 2015 Paris agreement, a landmark deal to address the impact and threats of climate change.

The IPCC, an intergover­nmental body under the United Nations, issued last Oct. 6 a special report on the growing impacts of global warming and greenhouse gas emissions.

It concluded that climate-related risks to health, livelihood­s, food security, water supply, human security and economic growth are pro- jected to increase if global warming reaches 1.5 degrees and eventually two degrees.

Alvarez said the IPCC report is an urgent wakeup call for government­s and leaders across the globe to double their efforts towards a lowcarbon economy that will sustain the planet’s future for generation­s.

He said trends in intensity and frequency of some climate and weather extremes have been widely experience­d, noting that warming greater than the global annual average is being experience­d in many regions and some impacts may be long-lasting or irreversib­le, such as the loss of some ecosystems.

Alvarez, chairman of the advisory board of the Washington-based Cli- mate Institute, said the IPCC findings are not entirely new, pointing out that what is new is the level and speed of global warming impacts.

“ASEAN countries will be hit particular­ly hard by climate change, causing the region’ s agricultur­e dependent economies to contract by as much as 6.7 percent annually by the end of the century,” he said.

Citing an Asian Developmen­t Bank study, the former climate body chief said the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam are especially vulnerable because of large coastal population­s facing rising sea levels and heavily dependent on rice and agricultur­e products, which suffer from water shortages as well as floods.

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