The Columbus Dispatch

UN: Earth ‘on track’ to unlivable status

Report says countries must drasticall­y reduce greenhouse gas output

- Frank Jordans and Seth Borenstein

BERLIN – Temperatur­es on Earth will shoot past a key danger point unless greenhouse gas emissions fall faster than countries have committed, the world’s top body of climate scientists said Monday, warning of the consequenc­es of inaction but also noting hopeful signs of progress.

U.N. Secretary-general Antonio Guterres said the report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change revealed “a litany of broken climate promises” by government­s and corporatio­ns, accusing them of stoking global warming by clinging to harmful fossil fuels.

“It is a file of shame, cataloging the empty pledges that put us firmly on track toward an unlivable world,” he said.

Government­s agreed in the 2015 Paris accord to keep global warming well below 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit this century, ideally no more than 2.7 degrees . Yet temperatur­es have already increased by more than 2 degrees since preindustr­ial times, resulting in measurable increases in disasters such flash floods, extreme heat, more intense hurricanes and longer-burning wildfires, putting human lives in danger and costing government­s hundreds of billions of dollars to confront.

Ongoing investment­s in fossil fuel infrastruc­ture and clearing large swaths of forest for agricultur­e undermine the massive curbs in emissions needed to meet the Paris goal, the report found.

Emissions in 2019 were about 12% higher than they were in 2010 and 54% higher than in 1990, said Skea.

The rate of growth has slowed from 2.1% per year in the early part of this century to 1.3% per year between 2010 and 2019, the report’s authors said. But they voiced “high confidence” that unless countries step up their efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions, the planet will on average be 4.3 to 6.3 degrees warmer by the end of the century – a level experts say is sure to cause severe

impacts for much of the world’s population.

Such cuts would be hard to achieve without without drastic, economy-wide measures, the panel acknowledg­ed. It’s more likely that the world will pass 2.7 degrees and efforts will then need to be made to bring temperatur­es back down again, including by removing vast amounts of carbon dioxide – the main greenhouse gas – from the atmosphere.

Many experts say this is unfeasible with current technologi­es, and even if it could be done it would be far costlier than preventing the emissions in the first place.

Among the solutions recommende­d are a rapid shift away from fossil fuels toward renewable energy such as increasing­ly cheap solar and wind power, the electrific­ation of transport, less meat consumptio­n, more efficient use of resources and massive financial support for poor countries unable to pay for such measures without help.

The situation is as if humanity has “gone to the doctor in a very unhealthy

condition,” and the doctor saying “you need to change, it’s a radical change. If you don’t you’re in trouble,” said report co-author Pete Smith, a professor of soils and global change at the University Aberdeen.

“It’s not like a diet,” Smith said. “It is a fundamenta­l lifestyle change. It’s changing what you eat, how much you eat and get on a more active lifestyle.”

One move often described as “lowhanging fruit” by scientists is to plug methane leaks from mines, wells and landfills that release the potent but short-lived greenhouse gas into the atmosphere. A pact forged between the United States and China at last year’s U.N. climate conference in Glasgow aims to do just that.

“You can see the first signs that the actions that people are taking are beginning to make a difference,” said Skea, the panel’s co-chair.

“The big message we’ve got (is that) human activities got us into this problem and human agency can actually get us out of it again,” he said.

The panel’s reports have become increasing­ly blunt since the first one was published in 1990, and the latest may be the last before the planet passes 2.7 degrees 1.5C of warming, Skea told The AP.

Last August, it said climate change caused by humans was “an establishe­d fact” and warned that some effects of global warming are already inevitable. In late February, the panel published a report that outlined how further temperatur­e increases will multiply the risk of floods, storms, drought and heat waves worldwide.

Still, the British government’s former chief science adviser David King, who wasn’t involved in writing the report, said there are optimistic assumption­s about how much carbion dioxide the world can afford to emit.

The U.N. panel suggests there’s still a “carbon budget” of 550 billion U.S. tons hat can be emitted before hitting the 2.7degree threshold.

“We don’t actually have a remaining carbon budget to burn,” said King, who now chairs the Climate Crisis Advisory Group.

“It’s just the reverse. We’ve already done too much in the way of putting greenhouse gases up there,” he said, arguing that the IPCC’S calculatio­n omits new risks and potentiall­y self-reinforcin­g effects already happening in some places.

Such warnings were echoed by U.N. chief Guterres, citing scientists’ warnings that the planet is moving “perilously close to tipping points that could lead to cascading and irreversib­le climate impacts.”

“But high-emitting government­s and corporatio­ns are not just turning a blind eye; they are adding fuel to the flames,” he said, calling for an end to further coal, oil and gas extraction that the report said might have to be abandoned anyway, resulting in losses of trillions of dollars.

Vulnerable nations said the report showed big polluters have to step up their efforts.

“We are looking to the G-20, to the world’s biggest emitters, to set ambitious targets ahead of COP27, and to reach those targets – by investing in renewables, cutting out coal and fossil fuel subsidies,” said Tina Stege, climate envoy for the Marshall Islands.

 ?? ANUPAM NATH/AP FILE ?? A Karbi tribal woman whose agricultur­e land had been transferre­d to build a solar power plant grazes her cow near the plant in Mikir Bamuni village, India. A United Nations-backed panel released a highly anticipate­d scientific report Monday on internatio­nal efforts to curb climate change before global temperatur­es reach dangerous levels.
ANUPAM NATH/AP FILE A Karbi tribal woman whose agricultur­e land had been transferre­d to build a solar power plant grazes her cow near the plant in Mikir Bamuni village, India. A United Nations-backed panel released a highly anticipate­d scientific report Monday on internatio­nal efforts to curb climate change before global temperatur­es reach dangerous levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States