Major climate changes inevitable and irreversible
– IPCC’s starkest warning yet
Report warns temperatures likely to rise by more than
1.5C bringing widespread extreme weather
Fiona
Harvey Environment correspondent
Mon 9 Aug
2021 09.00 BST
Human
activity is changing the Earth’s climate in ways “unprecedented” in thousands
or hundreds of thousands of years, with some of the changes now inevitable and
“irreversible”, climate scientists have warned.
Within the
next two decades, temperatures are likely to rise by more than 1.5C above
pre-industrial levels, breaching the ambition of the 2015 Paris climate
agreement, and bringing widespread devastation and extreme weather.
Only rapid
and drastic reductions in greenhouse gases in this decade can prevent such
climate breakdown, with every fraction of a degree of further heating likely to
compound the accelerating effects, according to the International Panel on
Climate Change, the world’s leading authority on climate science.
The
comprehensive assessment of climate science published on Monday, the sixth such
report from the IPCC since 1988, has been eight years in the making,
marshalling the work of hundreds of experts and peer-review studies. It
represents the world’s full knowledge to date of the physical basis of climate
change, and found that human activity was “unequivocally” the cause of rapid
changes to the climate, including sea level rises, melting polar ice and
glaciers, heatwaves, floods and droughts.
World
leaders said the stark findings must force new policy measures as a matter of
urgency, to shift the global economy to a low-carbon footing. Governments from
197 countries will meet this November in Glasgow for vital UN climate talks,
called Cop26.
Each nation
is asked to come to Cop26 with fresh plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
to a level that will limit global heating to no more than 1.5C above
pre-industrial levels, the ambition of the Paris climate agreement and a goal
the IPCC emphasised was still possible, but only just.
António
Guterres, the UN secretary-general, warned: “[This report] is a code red for
humanity. The alarm bells are deafening, and the evidence is irrefutable:
greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and deforestation are choking
our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk.”
He called
for an end to new coal plants and to new fossil fuel exploration and
development, and for governments, investors and businesses to pour all their
efforts into a low-carbon future. “This report must sound a death knell for
coal and fossil fuels, before they destroy our planet,” he said.
Boris
Johnson, prime minister of the UK, hosts of Cop26, said: “Today’s report makes
for sobering reading, and it is clear that the next decade is going to be
pivotal to securing the future of our planet … I hope today’s report will be a
wake-up call for the world to take action now, before we meet in Glasgow in
November for the critical Cop26 summit.”
John Kerry,
special envoy to US president Joe Biden, said: “The IPCC report underscores the
overwhelming urgency of this moment. The world must come together before the
ability to limit global warming to 1.5C is out of reach … Glasgow must be a
turning point in this crisis.”
Temperatures
have now risen by about 1.1C since the period 1850 to 1900, but stabilising the
climate at 1.5C was still possible, the IPCC said. That level of heating would
still result in increasing heatwaves, more intense storms, and more serious
droughts and floods, but would represent a much smaller risk than 2C.
Richard
Allan, a professor of climate science at Reading University, and an IPCC lead
author, said each fraction of a degree of warming was crucial. “You are
promoting moderate extreme weather events to the premier league of extreme
events [with further temperature rises],” he said.
Civil
society groups urged governments to act without delay. Doug Parr, chief
scientist at Greenpeace UK, said: “This is not the first generation of world
leaders to be warned by scientists about the gravity of the climate crisis, but
they’re the last that can afford to ignore them. The increasing frequency,
scale and intensity of climate disasters that have scorched and flooded many
parts of the world in recent months is the result of past inaction. Unless
world leaders finally start to act on these warnings, things will get much,
much worse.”
Stephen
Cornelius, chief adviser on climate change at WWF, added: “This is a stark
assessment of the frightening future that awaits us if we fail to act. With the
world on the brink of irreversible harm, every fraction of a degree of warming
matters to limit the dangers.”
Even if the
world manages to limit warming to 1.5C, some long-term impacts of warming
already in train are likely to be inevitable and irreversible. These include
sea level rises, the melting of Arctic ice, and the warming and acidification
of the oceans. Drastic reductions in emissions can stave off worse climate
change, according to IPCC scientists, but will not return the world to the more
moderate weather patterns of the past.
Ed Hawkins,
a professor of climate science at the University of Reading, and a lead author
for the IPCC, said: “We are already experiencing climate change, including more
frequent and extreme weather events, and for many of these impacts there is no
going back.”
This report
is likely to be the last report from the IPCC while there is still time to stay
below 1.5C, added Joeri Rogelj, director of research at the Grantham Institute,
Imperial College London, and an IPCC lead author. “This report shows the closer
we can keep to 1.5C, the more desirable the climate we will be living in, and
it shows we can stay within 1.5C but only just – only if we cut emissions in
the next decade,” he said. “If we don’t, by the time of the next IPCC report at
the end of this decade, 1.5C will be out the window.”
Monday’s
report will be followed next year by two further instalments: part two will
focus on the impacts of the climate crisis; and the third will detail the
potential solutions. Work on the report has been hampered by the Covid-19
pandemic, which delayed publication by some months, and forced scientists to
collaborate mainly online and through video conferencing.
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