How many years until we must act on climate?
Zero, say these climate thinkers
Jennifer
Francis , Michael Mann , Holly Jean Buck and Peter Kalmus
We asked a panelist of experts on when we need to
start changing our economies and ways of consuming and producing. Their answer:
now
‘Phasing
out fossil fuels, and supporting other countries in exiting fossil fuels, is
the best bet for a peaceful future.’ Photograph: Barry Lewis/In Pictures/Getty
Images
Wed 28 Jul
2021 11.24 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jul/28/climate-crisis-zero-fossil-fuels-environment
Peter Kalmus: ‘Zero years’
We have
zero years before climate and ecological breakdown, because it’s already here.
We have zero years left to procrastinate. The longer we wait to act, the worse
the floods, fires, droughts, famines and heatwaves will get.
The primary
cause of these catastrophes is burning fossil fuel. Therefore, we must shut
down the fossil fuel industry as quickly as we can. Fossil fuel subsidies must
end today. New fracking wells, pipelines and other fossil fuel infrastructure can
no longer be built; that we continue on this path is collective insanity.
Fossil fuel must be capped and rationed, and diverted to necessities as we
transition to a zero-carbon civilization. If we fail, the planet will continue
to heat up, creeping past 1.5C, then 2C, then 3C of global heating as we keep
squandering precious time. With every fraction of a degree, the floods and
fires and heat will get worse. Coastal cities will be abandoned. Ocean currents
will shift. Crops will fail. Ecosystems will collapse. Hundreds of millions
will flee regions with humid heat too high for the human body. Geopolitics will
break down. No place will be safe. These disasters are like gut punches to our
civilization.
There are
tipping points lurking in our future, but it’s impossible to know when they
will be triggered. What’s certain is that every day we fail to act brings us
closer. Some, like the loss of the Amazon rainforest, may already have been
passed.
Peter
Kalmus is a climate scientist at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Lab. He is the author of
Being the Change: Live Well and Spark a Climate Revolution
Jennifer Francis: ‘We cannot wait’
We need to
immediately stop subsidizing all aspects of the fossil fuel industry. According
to this report, the fossil fuel industry received $66bn in 2016, while
renewables (excluding nuclear) only received $9.5bn. We should instead use
those billions of subsidy dollars to ramp up the renewable energy industry:
generation (wind, solar, nuclear), distribution (smarter grid), storage and electric
transportation.
If we do
not succeed in changing our destructive behavior, the increasing trends in
extreme weather, sea levels, government destabilization and human misery will
continue and worsen.
Extreme
heatwaves, drought, wildfires and flooding events like those we’ve seen in
recent summers will become commonplace. Many coastal cities and communities
around the globe will be increasingly inundated by high tides and storm surges.
Longer, more intense droughts will destroy cropland and force agricultural
communities to uproot their families in search of a better life. The
devastation of coral reefs around the world will worsen, wiping out fisheries
that provide staple protein for millions of people. All of these impacts are
happening now. If we don’t act fast, many communities, cultures and species
will cease to exist.
Jennifer
Francis is senior scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center
Michael Mann: ‘Strictly speaking, zero’
How many
years do we have to act? Strictly speaking, zero – which is to say, that we
must act, in earnest, now. We have a decade within which we must halve global
carbon emissions. As I argue in The New Climate War, this requires dramatic
systemic change: no new fossil fuel infrastructure, massive subsidies for
renewables, carbon pricing and deploying other policy tools to accelerate the
clean energy transition already under way.
We are
seeing unprecedented public awareness, renewed leadership from the US and
diplomatic progress with China, the other of the world’s two largest carbon
polluters. There is reason for cautious optimism that we can rise to the
challenge. But there is much work to do, and precious little time now to do it.
We must now choose between two paths as we face our future. One leads to
massive suffering and collapse of our civilizational infrastructure. The other
leads to a prosperous future for us, our children and grandchildren. But it
requires that we leave fossil fuels behind. The choice is ours.
Michael E
Mann is distinguished professor of atmospheric science and director of the
Earth System Science Center at Penn State University. He is author of the
recent book, The New Climate War: The Fight to Take Back our Planet
Holly Jean Buck: ‘We need action now’
We need to
ramp up action now in order to transform all of our major systems by 2050:
energy, transportation, industry, agriculture, waste management. We’ll need to
eat less meat, farm in ways that store more carbon in the soils, reforest
degraded or abandoned land and restore wetlands.
We need to
force companies to outfit cement plants and other industrial facilities with
carbon capture technologies. When it comes to energy, we need to electrify
everything. This means replacing gas-fired heating systems with an electric
heat pump in your home and swapping out gas-fired stoves. It means inventing
new types of energy storage for those times when the wind isn’t blowing and the
sun isn’t shining, and getting used to responding to the grid – for example,
turning down your air conditioning when the power company says there isn’t
enough power (or letting them control your thermostat).
It means
shutting down fossil fuel power plants and ramping up wind, solar, geothermal
and probably nuclear, as well as building new transmission lines. Our targets
should be 60% renewable electricity by 2030, and 90% by 2050. This means
tripling renewable installations by 2030, or installing the equivalent of the
world’s largest solar farm every day. If those power lines and solar panels
look like they are industrializing the landscape, just think about the less
visible but deadly costs of the old infrastructure. Fossil fuel combustion was
responsible for 8.7m deaths in 2018.
Fossil
fuels need to be phased out around the globe. What will people in those
industries do? We will need entire new industries in hydrogen and carbon
management, industries that turn captured carbon dioxide into fuels and other
products as well as store it underground. We can’t just let fossil fuel
companies pivot to becoming petrochemical companies, and find ourselves awash
in more plastic. We can recycle, use products made from carbon, and innovate
new bioproducts. It’s not just an energy transition, it’s a materials
transition.
And it
needs to be global. If we don’t succeed in transitioning away from fossil fuels
globally, we could face an uneven world where a few rich countries congratulate
themselves for going green, and a few oil producer nations are supplying the
rest of the world with dirty fuel, which they use because they don’t have
alternatives. In that world, greenhouse gas concentrations keep rising. Climate
change exacerbates the risk of war and conflict. It’s hard to measure or model
this for exact quantitative projections, but it’s a serious concern. Phasing
out fossil fuels, and supporting other countries in exiting fossil fuels, is
the best bet for a peaceful future.
Holly Jean
Buck is a postdoctoral research fellow at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment
and Sustainability. She is the author of After Geoengineering: Climate Tragedy,
Repair, and Restoration
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