Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

World getting ‘measurably closer’ to 1.5-degree threshold

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THERE is a 50:50 chance of average global temperatur­e reaching 1.5 degrees Celcius above pre-industrial levels in the next five years, and the likelihood is increasing with time, according to a new report by the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on ( WMO), published on Tuesday in Geneva.

The Global Annual to Decadal Climate Update also reveals a 93 percent likelihood of at least one year between 2022 to 2026 becoming the warmest on record, thus knocking 2016 from the top spot.

The chance of the five-year average for this period being higher than the last five years, 2017-2021, is also 93 percent.

The 1.5 °C target is the goal of the Paris Agreement, which calls for countries to take concerted climate action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in order to limit global warming.

Probabilit­y rising

“This study shows with a high level of scientific skill that we are getting measurably closer to temporaril­y reaching the lower target of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change,” said Petteri Taalas, the WMO Secretary-General.

“The 1.5°C figure is not some random statistic”, he added, but “rather an indicator of the point at which climate impacts will become increasing­ly harmful for people and indeed the entire planet.”

The chance of temporaril­y exceeding the 1.5°C threshold has risen steadily since 2015, according to the report, which was produced by the United Kingdom’s Met Office, the lead centre for climate update prediction­s.

Back then, it was close to zero, but the probabilit­y increased to 10 percent over the past five years, and to nearly 50 percent for the period from 2022-2026.

Wide-ranging impacts

Mr Taalas warned that as long as countries continue to emit greenhouse gases, temperatur­es will continue to rise.

“And alongside that, our oceans will continue to become warmer and more acidic, sea ice and glaciers will continue to melt, sea level will continue to rise and our weather will become more extreme. Arctic warming is disproport­ionately high and what happens in the Arctic affects all of us,” he said.

The Paris Agreement outlines longterm goals that guide government­s towards limiting the global temperatur­e increase to well below 2 °C, while pursuing efforts to limit the increase even further to 1.5 °C.

‘‘Edging ever closer’’

Intergover­nmental Panel on

Climate Change further states that climate-related risks are higher for global warming of 1.5 °C than at present, but lower than at 2 °C.

“Our latest climate prediction­s show that continued global temperatur­e rise will continue, with an even chance that one of the years between 2022 and 2026 will exceed 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels,” said Dr. Leon Hermanson of the

Met Office, who led the report. “A single year of exceedance above 1.5 °C does not mean we have breached the iconic threshold of the Paris Agreement, but it does reveal that we are edging ever closer to a situation where 1.5 °C could be exceeded for an extended period.”

Last year, the global average temperatur­e was 1.1 °C above the pre-industrial baseline, according to the provisiona­l

report on the State of the Global Climate. The final report for 2021 will be released on 18 May.

said back-to-back La Niña events at the start and end of 2021 had a cooling effect on global temperatur­es. However, this is only temporary and does not reverse the long-term global warming trend.

Any developmen­t of an El Niño event would immediatel­y fuel temperatur­es, the agency said, as happened in 2016, the warmest year on record. News

 ?? ?? People protest in Germany as part of global climate change demonstrat­ions
People protest in Germany as part of global climate change demonstrat­ions

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