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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Monday, 3 November 2014
IPCC: rapid carbon emission cuts vital to stop severe impact of climate change
Most
important assessment of global warming yet warns carbon emissions must
be cut sharply and soon, but UN’s IPCC says solutions are available and
affordable
Carbon
emissions, such as those from the Mehrum coal-fired power plant in
Germany, will have to fall to zero to avoid catastrophic climate change,
the IPCC says.Photograph: Julian Stratenschulte/Corbis
Climate change is set to inflict “severe, widespread, and
irreversible impacts” on people and the natural world unless carbon
emissions are cut sharply and rapidly, according to the most important
assessment of global warming yet published.
The stark report states that climate change has already increased the
risk of severe heatwaves and other extreme weather and warns of worse
to come, including food shortages and violent conflicts. But it also
found that ways to avoid dangerous global warming are both available and
affordable.
“Science has spoken. There is no ambiguity in the message,” said the
UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, attending what he described as the
“historic” report launch. “Leaders must act. Time is not on our side.”
He said that quick, decisive action would build a better and sustainable
future, while inaction would be costly.
Ban added a message to investors, such as pension fund managers:
“Please reduce your investments in the coal- and fossil fuel-based
economy and [move] to renewable energy.”
The report, released in Copenhagen on Sunday by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC), is the work of thousands of scientists and was agreed after
negotiations by the world’s governments. It is the first IPCC report
since 2007 to bring together all aspects of tackling climate change and
for the first time states: that it is economically affordable; that
carbon emissions will ultimately have to fall to zero; and that global
poverty can only be reduced by halting global warming. The report also
makes clear that carbon emissions, mainly from burning coal, oil and
gas, are currently rising to record levels, not falling.
The report comes at a critical time for international action on climate change, with the deadline for a global deal just over a year away. In September, 120 national leaders met at the UN in New York to address climate change, while hundreds of thousands of marchers around the world demanded action.
“We have the means to limit climate change,” said Rajendra Pachauri,
chair of the IPCC. “The solutions are many and allow for continued
economic and human development. All we need is the will to change.”
Lord Nicholas Stern, a professor at the London School of Economics
and the author of an influential earlier study, said the new IPCC report
was the “most important assessment of climate change ever prepared” and that it made plain that “further delays in tackling climate change would be dangerous and profoundly irrational”.
“The reality of climate change is undeniable, and cannot be simply
wished away by politicians who lack the courage to confront the
scientific evidence,” he said, adding that the lives and livelihoods of
hundreds of millions of people were at risk.
Ed Davey, the UK energy and climate change secretary, said: “This is
the most comprehensive and robust assessment ever produced. It sends a
clear message: we must act on climate change now. John Kerry, the US
secretary of state, said: “This is another canary in the coal mine. We
can’t prevent a large scale disaster if we don’t heed this kind of hard
science.”
Bill McKibben, a high-profile climate campaigner with 350.org,
said: “For scientists, conservative by nature, to use ‘serious,
pervasive, and irreversible’ to describe the effects of climate falls
just short of announcing that climate change will produce a zombie
apocalypse plus random beheadings plus Ebola.” Breaking the power of the
fossil fuel industry would not be easy, McKibben said. “But, thanks to
the IPCC, no one will ever be able to say they weren’t warned.” Singapore shrouded by a haze as carbon emissions soar.Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images
The new overarching IPCC report builds on previous reports on the science, impacts and solutions for climate change.
It concludes that global warming is “unequivocal”, that humanity’s role
in causing it is “clear” and that many effects will last for hundreds
to thousands of years even if the planet’s rising temperature is halted.
In terms of impacts, such as heatwaves and extreme rain storms
causing floods, the report concludes that the effects are already being
felt: “In recent decades, changes in climate have caused impacts on
natural and human systems on all continents and across the oceans.”
Droughts, coastal storm surges from the rising oceans and wildlife
extinctions on land and in the seas will all worsen unless emissions are
cut, the report states. This will have knock-on effects, according to
the IPCC: “Climate change is projected to undermine food security.” The
report also found the risk of wars could increase: “Climate change can
indirectly increase risks of violent conflicts by amplifying
well-documented drivers of these conflicts such as poverty and economic
shocks.”
Two-thirds of all the emissions permissible if dangerous climate
change is to be avoided have already been pumped into the atmosphere,
the IPPC found. The lowest cost route to stopping dangerous warming
would be for emissions to peak by 2020 – an extremely challenging goal –
and then fall to zero later this century.
The report calculates that to prevent dangerous climate change, investment in low-carbon electricity and energy efficiency
will have to rise by several hundred billion dollars a year before
2030. But it also found that delaying significant emission cuts to 2030
puts up the cost of reducing carbon dioxide by almost 50%, partly
because dirty power stations would have to be closed early. “If you
wait, you also have to do more difficult and expensive things,” said Jim
Skea, a professor at Imperial College London and an IPCC working group
vice-chair. The coal-fired Scherer plant in operation in Juliette, Georgia.Photograph: John Amis/AP
Tackling climate change need only trim economic growth rates by a tiny fraction, the IPCC states, and may actually improve growth by providing other benefits, such as cutting health-damaging air pollution. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) – the nascent technology
which aims to bury CO2 underground – is deemed extremely important by
the IPPC. It estimates that the cost of the big emissions cuts required
would more than double without CCS. Pachauri said: “With CCS it is
entirely possible for fossil fuels to continue to be used on a large
scale.”
The focus on CCS is not because the technology has advanced a great
deal in recent years, said Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, a professor at the
Université Catholique de Louvain in Belgium and vice-chair of the IPCC,
but because emissions have continued to increase so quickly. “We have
emitted so much more, so we have to clean up more later”, he said.
Linking CCS to the burning of wood and other plant fuels
would reduce atmospheric CO2 levels because the carbon they contain is
sucked from the air as they grow. But van Ypersele said the IPCC report
also states “very honestly and fairly” that there are risks to this
approach, such as conflicts with food security.
In contrast to the importance the IPCC gives to CCS, abandoning
nuclear power or deploying only limited wind or solar power increases
the cost of emission cuts by just 6-7%. The report also states that
behavioural changes, such as dietary changes that could involve eating
less meat, can have a role in cutting emissions.
As part of setting out how the world’s nations can cut emissions
effectively, the IPCC report gives prominence to ethical considerations.
“[Carbon emission cuts] and adaptation raise issues of equity, justice,
and fairness,” says the report. “The evidence suggests that outcomes
seen as equitable can lead to more effective [international]
cooperation.”
These issues are central to the global climate change negotiations
and their inclusion in the report was welcomed by campaigners, as was
the statement that adapting countries and coastlines to cope with global
warming cannot by itself avert serious impacts.
“Rich governments must stop making empty promises and come up with
the cash so the poorest do not have to foot the bill for the lifestyles
of the wealthy,” said Harjeet Singh, from ActionAid.
The statement that carbon emissions must fall to zero was
“gamechanging”, according to Kaisa Kosonen, from Greenpeace. “We can
still limit warming to 2C, or even 1.5C or less even, [but] we need to
phase out emissions,” she said. Unlike CCS, which is yet to be proven
commercially, she said renewable energy was falling rapidly in cost.
Sam Smith, from WWF, said: “The big change in this report is that it
shows fighting climate change is not going to cripple economies and that
it is essential to bringing people out of poverty. What is needed now
is concerted political action.” The rapid response of politicians to the
recent global financial crisis showed, according to Smith, that “they
could act quickly and at scale if they are sufficiently motivated”.
Michel Jarraud, secretary general of the World Meteorological
Organisation, said the much greater certainty expressed in the new IPCC
report would give international climate talks a better chance than those
which failed in 2009. “Ignorance can no longer be an excuse for no
action,” he said.
Observers played down the moves made by some countries with large
fossil fuel reserves to weaken the language of the draft IPCC report
written by scientists and seen by the Guardian, saying the final report
was conservative but strong.
However, the statement that “climate change is expected to lead to
increases in ill-health in many regions, including greater likelihood of
death” was deleted in the final report, along with criticism that
politicians sometimes “engage in short-term thinking and are biased
toward the status quo”.
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