UN climate report raises pressure on Biden to
seize a rare moment
The US president may have only one chance to pass
legislation to confront the crisis: ‘We can’t wait’
Oliver
Milman
@olliemilman
Tue 10 Aug
2021 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/aug/10/un-climate-report-joe-biden-us-response
A stark UN
report on how humanity has caused unprecedented, and in some cases
“irreversible”, changes to the world’s climate has heaped further pressure on
Joe Biden to deliver upon what may be his sole chance to pass significant
legislation to confront the climate crisis and break a decade of American
political inertia.
The US
president said the release on Monday of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change report showed that “we can’t wait to tackle the climate crisis. The
signs are unmistakable. The science is undeniable. And the cost of inaction
keeps mounting.”
The IPCC
report, developed over the past eight years by scientists who combed over more
than 14,000 studies, shows that the US, like the rest of the world, is running
out of time to avoid disastrous climate impacts, with a critical global heating
threshold of 1.5C to be breached far earlier than previously expected,
potentially within a decade.
“This is
not a future problem, it’s a problem now. I’m literally seeing climate change
out of my window, climate change is in my lungs,” said Linda Mearns, an IPCC
report co-author located in Boulder, Colorado, which has been baked in extreme
heat and wildfire smoke in recent weeks.
Mearns, who
has been involved in IPCC reports since 1990, said the latest iteration was
“very through and disturbing” and demanded a strong response. “I’m not sure
what will be required for people to get it, but my hope is that it will
galvanize everyone in Glasgow to meet their agreements,” she added in reference
to UN climate talks between world leaders in October.
Much of
that global action will hinge upon the response mustered by the US, the world’s
second-largest carbon emitter. Biden’s narrow window of opportunity to
drastically cut emissions is dependent upon the contents of a $3.5tn bill that
Democrats hope to pass before midterm elections next year, when the party may
well lose control of Congress.
“Congress
didn’t pass a climate bill in 2009 and it’s taken over a decade to get us back
to serious climate legislation,” said Leah Stokes, a climate policy expert at
the University of California, Santa Barbara. “This summer is the best chance we
have ever had to pass a big climate bill. This is it. President Biden is poised
to become the climate president we need. But there are no more decades left to
waste.”
Stokes said
she was “very optimistic” the reconciliation bill would include two critical
climate measures to help the US slash its emissions in half this decade – a
scheme to help utilities to phase out fossil fuels from the electricity grid
and tax credits to encourage renewable energy and electric cars.
The
measures will need the support of all Senate Democrats, including Joe Manchin
and Kyrsten Sinema, who have expressed doubts over the scope of the bill.
Republicans, who have long allied with the fossil fuel industry to oppose any
significant action to avert the climate emergency, are uniformly opposed to the
bill.
“If
senators truly followed the science in this report, we’d have 100 votes for
climate action,” said Ed Markey, a Democratic senator who help craft the Green
New Deal proposal with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Markey said the IPCC report
“must be the final warning to the world that time has run out to save the
planet from dangerous and irreversible climate change”.
Climate
campaigners have urged Biden to do more to match his rhetoric, pointing out
that the IPCC report highlights the sharp increase in methane, a potent
greenhouse gas produced from oil and gas drilling, as well as from animal
agriculture. The federal government is mulling new restrictions on methane,
although new leases for drilling are still being issued.
“This
latest IPCC report must be a wake up call for Biden and Congress that the half
measures they’ve proposed are not nearly enough to end the climate crisis,”
said Varshini Prakash, executive director of Sunrise Movement, who said she had
woken up “enraged” at the IPCC’s findings. “Our politicians shouldn’t need a
report to tell them how bad things are. We’re already living it.”
Scientists,
too, have called for their repeated warnings over the climate crisis, so often
eclipsed by political intransigence or falsehoods spread by the fossil fuel
industry, to finally be heeded by US lawmakers. “There’s really one key message
that emerges from this report: we are out of time,” said Kim Cobb, a climate
scientist at Georgia Tech.
The
scientists Joeri Rogelj and Piers Forster hold up signs urging a reduction in
carbon emissions, after completing the major UN climate report
Several climate
impacts are now locked in even if planet-heating emissions are severely cut,
including global sea level rise of at least a foot and a half by the end of the
century, imperiling coastal American cities already struggling with increasing
flooding. The increase could even balloon to 7ft if the Antarctic ice sheet
collapses more quickly than expected.
The US west
is now racked by prolonged drought, extraordinary record-breaking heat and
enormous wildfires and the IPCC report warns all of these phenomena will get
worse, with dangerous heatwaves that once would have occurred every 50 years
already becoming more common and expected once every five years at 1.5C of
warming.
“The
continued dithering is no longer about the lack of scientific evidence, but rather
directly tied to a lack of political will and the overwhelming influence of the
fossil fuel industry,” said Kristina Dahl, senior climate scientist at the
Union of Concerned Scientists. “The scientists keep showing up time and time
again. Now it’s time for policymakers to do the same.”
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