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Global temperature rises could bring 'destructive' effects, U.N. says
International
climate experts have warned that global temperatures could rise sharply this
century with "wide-ranging and destructive" consequences after
greenhouse gas emissions hit record levels last year.
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Vapour comes out of chimneys at a sugar processing factory in Miranda de
Ebro, Spain. (Photo:Reuters)
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Global temperatures could rise sharply this century
with "wide-ranging and destructive" consequences after greenhouse gas
emissions hit record levels last year, international climate experts warned on
Tuesday.
The head of the World Meteorological Organization
said global temperatures could rise by 3-5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial
levels this century - more than three times agreed limits - if nothing is done
to stop rising emissions.
Greenhouse gas emissions surged to a record level
last year, the United Nations said in its "Emissions Gap Report",
released ahead of U.N. climate talks in Madrid next week aimed at spurring
world leaders to limit climate change.
It measures the amount of emissions cuts needed to
limit global temperature rises to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) above
pre-industrial levels, as agreed in the 2015 Paris Agreement. The U.N.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change last year warned of huge global
changes if that target is not met, such as the loss of nearly all coral reefs
and most Arctic sea ice.
Under current national pledges to cut emissions,
"temperatures can be expected to rise by 3.2C this century, bringing
wide-ranging and destructive climate impacts," said a summary of the
report by the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP).
"Being a grandfather - we don't want to leave
that for our grandkids," the report's lead author John Christensen told a
Geneva news conference.
"With 3 degrees we would lose a fairly big
fraction of the current (agricultural) yield and areas like Africa where the
population is growing would really suffer," said WMO Secretary-General
Petteri Taalas.
The UNEP report said the safest temperature
threshold set in Paris - of 1.5C - was still achievable, but would require
emissions cuts of 7.6% a year between 2020-2030. Limiting the rise to 2C it
would mean annual cuts of 2.7%.
"We are talking about transformational change
now - incremental change simply will not make it. We simply need to transform
societies in the next 10 years," Christensen said.
"STAY AT THE TABLE"
The report showed that emissions, including those
from land-use change such as deforestation, had not yet peaked and rose to a
record 55.3 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2018.
Christensen urged countries that had met their
targets comfortably, such as Turkey and Russia, to tighten them significantly.
The report named the United States as one of
several large emitters, alongside Brazil and Japan, falling short of its own
targets, or Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). This month, the Trump
administration filed paperwork to quit the Paris Agreement in the first step of
a formal withdrawal process.
Some officials have downplayed the impact of the
U.S. move, saying that companies as well as states and cities have boosted
commitments to fight climate change.
Still, UNEP's executive-director Inger Andersen
urged Washington to reconsider. "So, the bottom line here is, stick, stay
at the table, negotiate, engage and ensure that we, together, can move forward
on climate action."
Countries face a 2020 deadline to set more
ambitious emissions cut pledges. "Had we done it 10 years ago, it would
have been easier," said Andersen.


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