Dramatic climate action needed to curtail ‘crazy’
extreme weather
Heatwaves, wildfires and floods are just the ‘tip of
the iceberg’, leading climate scientists say
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Mon 28 Aug
2023 17.00 BST
The “crazy”
extreme weather rampaging around the globe in 2023 will become the norm within
a decade without dramatic climate action, the world’s leading climate
scientists have said.
The
heatwaves, wildfires and floods experienced today were just the “tip of the
iceberg” compared with even worse effects to come, they said, with limitations
in climate models leaving the world “flying partially blind” into the future.
With fears
that humanity’s relentless carbon emissions have finally pushed the climate
crisis into a new and accelerating phase of destruction, the Guardian sought
the expert assessments of more than 40 scientists from around the world.
They said
that the rise in global temperature was entirely in line with decades of
warnings and was being boosted this year by the return of the El Niño climate
pattern. But they said that people and places were more vulnerable to extreme
weather than expected and were suffering effects never previously experienced
as climate records were shattered.
“July was
the hottest month in human history and people around the world are suffering
the consequences,” said Prof Piers Forster at the University of Leeds, UK. “But
this is what we expected at [this level] of warming. This will become the
average summer in 10 years’ time unless the world cooperates and puts climate
action top of the agenda.”
“The
impacts are frighteningly more impactful than I – and many climate scientists I
know – expected,” said Prof Krishna AchutaRao at the Indian Institute of
Technology.
Dr
Christophe Cassou, a CNRS researcher at the Université Paul Sabatier Toulouse
III, in France, said: “Changes in [climate] hazards have not been
underestimated at global scale. But the impacts have been underestimated
because we are much more vulnerable than we thought – our vulnerability is
smacking us in the face.”
Heat and
wildfire records have been broken around the world in 2023, from North America,
to Europe, to Asia. “Our perception is also biased by the fact that we are
living more often in uncharted territory, which gives a sense of acceleration,”
said Cassou. “We now feel climate change that is emerging above usual weather.”
Climate
models have accurately predicted the rise in global temperature as humanity’s
greenhouse gas emissions have surged. But numerous scientists highlighted the
particular difficulty they have in projecting extreme weather events, which are
by definition rare.
“We may be
seriously underestimating the dangers ahead,” said Dr Raúl Cordero, until
recently at the University of Santiago, Chile. “We are flying partially blind
on what to expect for climate extremes.”
The
scientists were clear the world had not yet passed a tipping point into runaway
climate change. But Dr Rein Haarsma at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological
Institute said tipping points were getting closer: “The extremes we see now
happening could induce tipping points such as the collapse of the Atlantic
meridional overturning circulation and melting of the Antarctic ice sheets,
that would have devastating impacts.”
A “tiny
window” of opportunity remained open to avoid the worst of the climate crisis,
the scientists said. The researchers overwhelmingly pointed to one action as
critical: slashing the burning of fossil fuels down to zero.
“We need to
stop burning fossil fuels,” said Dr Friederike Otto at Imperial College London.
“Now. Not some time when we’ve allowed companies to make all the money they
possibly can.”
Prof Emily
Shuckburgh at the University of Cambridge in the UK said: “Anyone in any way
perpetuating the fossil fuel era is firmly on the wrong side of history.”
“Knowing
that we will look back on today’s extreme events as mild relative to what lies
in our future is truly mind-boggling,” said Prof Andrea Dutton at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, US. “The speed at which we make this
transition will define the future that we get.”
The UN is
convening a climate ambition summit on 20 September. “Almost all our indicators
on climate are pointing in the wrong direction,” said Amina Mohammed, the UN’s
deputy secretary general. “The World Meteorological Organization has warned
that the next five years are likely to be the hottest on record, hitting
vulnerable communities the hardest.
“We hope
and expect that [political] leaders, the private sector, and civil society
organisations, will come to the summit with credible and ambitious actions and
commitments.”
The UN’s
leading climate summit of 2023, Cop28, will begin in late November. It is being
hosted by the United Arab Emirates and being presided over by Sultan Al Jaber,
the chief executive of the UAE’s state oil company. Global carbon emissions
have continued to rise in recent years, but must fall by 43% to have a good
chance of keeping global heating below 1.5C.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário