UN sounds clarion call over irreversible climate impacts by humans
The UN climate panel sounded a dire warning Monday, saying the world is dangerously close to runaway warming â" and that humans are "unequivocally" to blame.
Already, greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere are high enough to guarantee climate disruption for decades if not centuries, scientists warn in a report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
That's on top of the deadly heat waves, powerful hurricanes and other weather extremes that are happening now and are likely to become more severe.
Describing the report as a "code red for humanity," UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged an immediate end to coal energy and other high-polluting fossil fuels.
"The alarm bells are deafening," Guterres said in a statement. "This report must sound a death knell for coal and fossil fuels, before they destroy our planet."
The IPCC report comes just three months before a major UN climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, where nations will be under pressure to pledge ambitious climate action and substantial financing.
Wildfires fuelled by heat and drought are sweeping away entire towns in the U.S. West and Canada, including Lytton, B.C., which was levelled by a fire earlier this summer. (The Canadian Press)Drawing on more than 14,000 scientific studies, the report gives the most comprehensive and detailed picture yet of how climate change is altering the natural world â" and what still could be ahead.
Unless immediate, rapid and large-scale action is taken to reduce emissions, the report says, the average global temperature will likely cross the 1.5 C warming threshold within the next 20 years.
So far, nations' pledges to cut emissions have been inadequate for bringing down the level of greenhouse gases accumulated in the atmosphere.
Reacting to the findings, governments and campaigners expressed alarm.
"The IPCC report underscores the overwhelming urgency of this moment," U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said in a statement. "The world must come together before the ability to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius is out of reach."
A man walks a bike along a flooded road after record downpours in Zhengzhou city in central China's Henan province July 20. (Chinatopix via The Associated Press) Reports warns of catastrophic impactsEmissions "unequivocally caused by human activities" have pushed today's average global temperature 1.1 C higher than the preindustrial average â" and would have pushed it 0.5 C further if not for the tempering effect of pollution in the atmosphere, the report says.
That means that, as societies transition away from fossil fuels, much of the aerosols in the air would vanish â" and temperatures could spike.
Scientists warn that warming more than 1.5 C above the preindustrial average could trigger runaway climate change with catastrophic impacts, such as heat so intense that crops fail or people die just from being outdoors.
Every additional 0.5 C of warming will also boost the intensity and frequency of heat extremes and heavy rainfall, as well as droughts in some regions. Because temperatures fluctuate from year to year, scientists measure climate warming in terms of 20-year averages.
"We have all the evidence we need to show we are in a climate crisis," said three-time IPCC co-author Sonia Seneviratne, a climate scientist at ETH Zurich who doubts she will sign up for a fourth report. "Policy makers have enough information. You can ask: Is it a meaningful use of scientists' time, if nothing is being done?"
The 1.1 C warming already recorded has been enough to unleash disastrous weather. This year, heat waves killed hundreds in the U.S. Pacific Northwest and smashed records around the world. Wildfires fuelled by heat and drought are sweeping away entire towns in the U.S. West, releasing record emissions from Siberian forests, and driving Greeks to flee their lands by ferry.
"Every bit of warming matters," said IPCC co-author Ed Hawkins, a climate scientist at the University of Reading in Britain. "The consequences get worse and worse as we get warmer."
Greenland's ice sheet is "virtually certain" to continue melting. Oceans will keep warming, with surface levels rising for centuries to come.
Some changes irreversible: reportIt's too late to prevent these particular changes. The best the world can do is to slow them down so that countries have more time to prepare and adapt.
"We are now committed to some aspects of climate change, some of which are irreversible for hundreds to thousands of years," said IPCC co-author Tamsin Edwards, a climate scientist at King's College London. "But the more we limit warming, the more we can avoid or slow down those changes."
But even to slow climate change, the report says, the world is running out of time.
If the world drastically cuts emissions in the next decade, average temperatures could still rise 1.5 C by 2040 and possibly 1.6 C by 2060 before stabilizing.
Children sit by a dug out water hole in a dry river bed in the remote village of Fenoaivo, Madagascar in November, 2020. As a consequence of three straight years of drought, along with historic neglect by the government of the region as well as the COVID-19 pandemic,1.5 million people are in need of emergency food assistance, according to the U.N. World Food Program. (Laetitia Bezain/The Associated Press)If the world does not cut emissions dramatically and instead continues the current trajectory, the planet could see 2 C warming by 2060 and 2.7 C by the century's end.
The earth has not been that warm since the Pliocene Epoch roughly 3 million years ago â" when the first ancestors to humans were appearing and oceans were 25 metres higher than today.
It could get even worse, if warming triggers feedback loops that release even more climate-warming carbon emissions such as the melting of Arctic permafrost or the dieback of global forests. Under these high-emissions scenarios, Earth could broil at temperatures 4.4 C above the preindustrial average by 2081-2100.
"We have already changed our planet, and some of those changes we will have to live with for centuries and millennia to come," said IPCC co-author Joeri Rogelj, a climate scientist at Imperial College London.
The question now, he said, is how many more irreversible changes we avoid: "We still have choices to make."
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