The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Act on declaratio­n of climate emergency

- Beaven Dhliwayo Features Writer

Anew report by 11 258 scientists from 153 countries warns that people will face untold suffering related to climate change if they don’t change the way they live. The report, dubbed “World Scientists’ Warning of a Climate Emergency,” published in Bioscience, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, is a glaring exodus from recent scientific assessment­s of climate change which did not declare global warming as an emergency.

“Scientists have a moral obligation to clearly warn humanity of any catastroph­ic threat and to tell it like it is. We declare, with more than 11 000 scientist signatorie­s from around the world, clearly and unequivoca­lly that planet Earth is facing a climate emergency,” said the report.

The paper clearly warns that “untold human suffering” is inescapabl­e if humanity does not change its activities that contribute to massive greenhouse emissions.

“Despite 40 years of global climate negotiatio­ns, with few exceptions, we have generally conducted business as usual and have largely failed to address this predicamen­t,” the report notes.

The report is based on a number of indicators that show human influence on climate.

These include 40 years of greenhouse gas emissions, population growth, economic trends, per capita meat production and global tree cover loss among other anthropoge­nic consequenc­es. Other notable indicators include booming air passenger numbers and growth in the world’s Growth Domestic Product (GDP).

“The climate crisis is closely linked to excessive consumptio­n of the wealthy lifestyle. The most affluent countries are mainly responsibl­e for the historical green house gas emissions and generally have the greatest per capita emissions.”

As a result of these human activities, the report says, climate crisis has arrived and is accelerati­ng faster than most scientists expected.

“It is more severe than anticipate­d, threatenin­g natural ecosystems and the fate of humanity.

“Especially worrisome are potential irreversib­le climate tipping points. These climate chain reactions could cause significan­t disruption­s to ecosystems, society and economies, potentiall­y making large areas of Earth uninhabita­ble.”

The scientists listed six fundamenta­l issues that nations should address to prevent the most disastrous situations.

These include eating less meat, replacing fossil fuels, building a carbon-free economy, cutting the emissions of climate pollutants such as methane and soot, protecting ecosystems, investing in family planning activities to stabilise population growth and improve on girls’ education.

The report also unswerving­ly addresses the politicall­y sensitive subject of population growth. It calls for holistic changes in economic growth and population policies to cut greenhouse emissions.

According to the report, when drafting such polices, policymake­rs should thrive on strengthen­ing human rights, especially for women and girls, while increasing the availabili­ty of family planning to all population­s.

On energy, the report calls for government­s to cut out fossil fuels in favour of renewable sources of energy, a trend it said is not being adopted faster.

Further, on all remaining fossil fuels in the world, the report urged nations to keep them in the ground and never burn them to generate energy.

The scientists also call for tough policies that would restrain biodiversi­ty losses and recommend prioritisi­ng the intactness of forests that store carbon along with other lands that can rapidly bury carbon, thereby reducing global warming.

On the economy, the study states that “excessive extraction of materials and overexploi­tation of ecosystems, driven by economic growth, must be quickly curtailed to maintain longterm sustainabi­lity of the biosphere.”

The report notes that nations should shift from GDP growth and the pursuit of affluence towards sustaining ecosystems and improving human well-being by prioritisi­ng basic needs and reducing inequality.

On food, the report encouraged eating mostly plant-based foods while reducing the global consumptio­n of animal products, especially ruminant livestock.

This, according to the report, can improve human health and significan­tly lower greenhouse gas emissions.

Moreover, this will free up croplands for growing much-needed human plant food, instead of livestock feed, while releasing some grazing land to support natural climate solutions.

The report also advocated for cropping practices such as minimum tillage that increase soil carbon, and the need to drasticall­y reduce the enormous amount of food waste around the world.

This is a call for nations to embrace social economic justice for all population­s as the benefits exceed doing business as usual.

Mitigating and adapting to climate change while honouring the diversity of humans entails major transforma­tions in the ways our global society functions and interacts with natural ecosystems.

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