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Climate and Environment

UN 'survival guide' report a stark warning on climate

Kelly Macnamara - Agence France-Presse
UN 'survival guide' report a stark warning on climate
People wade through a flooded street in Kawit, Cavite province on October 30, 2022, a day after Tropical Storm Nalgae hit.
AFP/Jam Sta. Rosa

PARIS, France — Devastating climate impacts are hitting faster than expected as the world teeters on reaching the 1.5 degree Celsius warming limit in a little over a decade, the UN said Monday.

Temperatures seen in recent years have stoked destructive storms and flooding, crop-wilting heatwaves and deadly droughts. 

But generations to come will look back on the hottest years of the 2020s as relatively cool, even if planet-warming fossil fuel emissions drop quickly, the UN's climate advisory panel said in a key report.   

The 36-page "summary for policymakers" —a synthesis of six major reports since 2018 from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)—is a brutal reminder that while humanity has the tools to prevent climate catastrophe, it is still not putting them to use. 

The world is currently set to reach 1.5C above pre-industrial levels—considered a safer limit to warming—in the early 2030s, which will ratchet up the severity of impacts in the near future. 

But it's not too late to turn things around, the head of the IPCC told AFP, describing the report as a "message of hope". 

"We have know-how, technology, tools, financial resources—everything needed to overcome the climate problems we have known about for so long," Hoesung Lee said in a video interview.

"What's lacking at this point is a strong political will to resolve this issues once and for all." 

'Humanity on thin ice' 

In response to the report, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said wealthy countries aiming for carbon neutrality in 2050 or beyond should speed up their goal to as close as possible to 2040 in order to "defuse the climate time bomb."

"Humanity is on thin ice —and that ice is melting fast," the United Nations chief said in a video message as the IPCC experts group issued its latest report, which he likened to "a survival guide for humanity."

The IPCC made clear that the benefits to society and the world economy of capping global warming under two degrees Celsius outweigh economic costs.

This is true even without accounting for all the rewards of avoiding climate damages, which range from the health impacts of air pollution to reduced crop yields.  

Week-long negotiations in Interlaken, Switzerland—which went two full days into overtime—were bogged down by fights over language about fossil fuels, by far the main driver of warming.

The report comes as the world has scrambled to shore up energy security following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, with countries in Europe and Asia turning to heavily polluting coal.

Greenhouse gas emissions from existing fossil fuel infrastructure will be enough to push the world beyond 1.5C, without the use of emerging technology to capture and store the carbon pollution, the IPCC said. 

The level of greenhouse gas emission reductions this decade will "largely determine" whether humanity can limit global warming to two degrees Celsius since preindustrial times, or the safer 1.5C, the UN expert report said.   

But estimates of future carbon dioxide pollution from existing oil, gas and coal infrastructure—if no new technology is added to capture the emissions—"already exceed the remaining carbon budget for limiting warming to 1.5C". 

Among the starkest warnings is on the looming threat of deadly heat.

Even if warming is capped at 1.8C—an optimistic scenario, according to some scientists—half of humanity could, by 2100, be exposed to periods of life-threatening climate conditions arising from the coupled impacts of extreme heat and humidity, according to research.

In the synthesis report, these findings are reflected in a world map of projected deadly impacts of humid heat across the tropics, especially in Southeast Asia, parts of Brazil and West Africa. 

There are similarly dire projections for health, the global food system and economic productivity.

CLIMATE CHANGE

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