Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

First time world exceeds 1,5C warming limit

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For the first time on record, global warming has exceeded temperatur­es of 1,5 degrees Celsius (2,7 degrees Fahrenheit) over a 12-month period, European climate monitors have said, in what scientists called a “warning to humanity”.

The European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) reported the run of exceptiona­l heat on Thursday, measuring temperatur­es between February 2023 to January 2024 to record the highest 12-month global temperatur­e average on record.

Storms, drought and fires lashed the planet as climate change, as well as the El Nino weather phenomenon that warms the surface waters in the eastern Pacific Ocean, made 2023 the planet’s hottest year in global records going back to 1850. The extremes have continued into 2024, C3S said, confirming the year-long warming of 1,52C above the 19th century benchmark.

Scientists said, however, that the world has not yet permanentl­y breached the crucial 1.5C warming threshold target outlined in the Paris climate agreement, which is measured over decades.

In 2015, almost 200 government­s signed the unpreceden­ted Paris climate agreement to phase out fossil fuels in favour of renewable energy in the second half of the century. Last year, the United Nations said the world is not on track to meet the longterm goals of that deal, including capping global warming at 1,5C.

Some scientists have said the Paris Agreement’s goal can no longer realistica­lly be met, but are still urging government­s to act faster to cut carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to limit overshooti­ng the target.

‘Hottest January’

The world also experience­d its hottest January on record, continuing a run of exceptiona­l heat fuelled by climate change, C3S said. Last month surpassed the previous warmest January, which occurred in 2020, in C3S’s records going back to 1950.

“Rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions are the only way to stop global temperatur­es increasing,” C3S Deputy Director Samantha Burgess said.

NASA’s climate satellite

On Thursday, US space agency NASA launched its newest satellite to survey the world’s oceans and atmosphere in never-before-seen detail.

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