Act now to secure a liveable future, say climate scientists
Tuesday 21 March 2023
The Independent Daily Edition
‘Humanity on thin ice’ unless 1.5C warming target is met
Senior Climate Correspondent in New York
After five years of meetings, reports and debate, the world’s scientific community has delivered an ultimatum on the climate crisis: “Act now to secure a liveable sustainable future for all.” The so-called “synthesis report” was published yesterday by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a body made up of hundreds of international scientists from a dizzying array of disciplines.
The new report boils down the six previous IPCC reports published since 2018, which pulled together and analysed thousands of scientific papers. It amounts to the most clear-eyed, up-to-date assessment of the climate crisis: how it’s affecting all corners of the world and its systems, and how humanity is faring in its attempts to mitigate disasters and adapt to those that are now unavoidable.
The report is clear that if transformative shifts are made across society to cut planet-heating greenhouse gas emissions this decade, it’s still possible to hold the average global temperature to 1.5C (2.7F). (The world has warmed 1.1C (2F) since industrialised countries began burning oil, gas and coal 200 years ago.)
But the challenge is immense because emissions continue to increase. This is largely down to existing fossil fuel infrastructure – and more is still being built. The pace and scale of what has been done so far, even with additional plans in the works, is far from enough. At the current level of emissions, humanity will blow past the 1.5C target in the coming decade.
Beyond 1.5C – a limit that all countries agreed to under the 2015 Paris Agreement – the threats increase at pace. But every incremental amount of warming that is avoided will matter immensely – especially to the most vulnerable. However, the report also warns: “The likelihood of abrupt and/or irreversible changes increases with higher global warming levels.”
The IPCC is unlikely to publish again until near the end of this decade, at which point the repeated, urgent warnings of scientists will do little to keep the increase within the 1.5C limit, if they continue to be ignored now. “There is a rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a liveable and sustainable future for all,” the IPCC states. “The choices and actions implemented in this decade will have impacts now and for thousands of years.”
Among the key findings are:
The impacts of global heating are hitting harder and faster than previously expected, the IPCC said, while countries are rapidly approaching some limits on being able to adapt to extremes. “The climate time-bomb is ticking,” said UN secretary general Antonio Guterres. “But today’s IPCC report is a how-to guide to defuse the climate time-bomb. It is a survival guide for humanity.” He added: “Humanity is on thin ice – and that ice is melting fast.”
Emissions need to start decreasing now, and be cut roughly in half by the end of the decade. The findings, while bleak, remain tinged with resolve. “Multiple, feasible and effective options” exist to slash emissions, and the cost of renewable energy is plummeting, the IPCC says.
The report also underlines that avoiding worsening outcomes means making rapid cuts in fossil fuels across the board, and no new infrastructure for oil, coal and gas. Yet it will be difficult to get rid of all emissions in sectors like agriculture, aviation, shipping, and industrial processes, the IPCC states, and these will need to be “counterbalanced” by the deployment of carbon removal from the atmosphere to achieve net zero.
This could be through biological means like planting trees, soil sequestration, the restoration of peatlands, and management of the ocean’s “blue carbon”. But the IPCC notes that alongside a “substantial reduction” in the use of fossil fuels, there will be a role for technologies around carbon capture and storage. There is also a diverse array of tools to help communities adapt to climate extremes, scientists said, and in ways that will make life better.
While holding to that 1.5C limit is expected to secure some level of liveability around the world, it will vary dramatically from region to region. Low-lying Pacific nations, sub-Saharan Africa and the Indian subcontinent are already experiencing catastrophic heatwaves, drought, flooding and cyclones. Richer and more northerly parts of the world are rapidly discovering that neither are they immune to these vicious cycles.
Alongside the effects on people, the climate crisis is taking an extreme toll on the natural world. Hundreds of species have been lost at the local level, the IPCC reports, while mass mortality events have been recorded on land and in the ocean. Approximately 30-50 per cent of land, fresh water and ocean needs to be protected to help ensure a healthy planet, the report recommends.
As heat rises, food and water insecurity is expected to jump, and these scarcities will affect, and could make worse, events such as pandemics and conflicts.
The final IPCC instalment was published after a week-long meeting in Interlaken, Switzerland, which saw deep rifts between rich and poor countries over emissions targets and financial support. IPCC reports must be signed off by national governments as a sign that they accept the scientific findings – and will incorporate them in their response to the climate crisis.
The deadline was extended again and again on Sunday, as big countries including China, Brazil and Saudi Arabia, as well as the United States and the European Union, haggled over phrases in the text, it was reported.
The IPCC report serves as a backdrop to key climate events taking place this year. Cop28, the international climate summit set to be held later this year in the UAE, will be the first “global stocktake” – a de facto report card on how each country is doing in cutting down emissions.
The IPCC report also provides black-and-white evidence that the climate crisis is taking a disproportionate toll on countries in the global South – and is likely to increase pressure on rich countries to stump up the climate finance that, despite promises, they have failed to fully deliver.
Deaths from floods, droughts and storms were 15 times higher in highly vulnerable regions over the last 10 years, compared to the most resilient areas. “Climate justice is crucial because those who have contributed least to climate change are being disproportionately affected,” said Aditi Mukherji, one of the report’s authors.
One of the biggest sticking points in the past week, it is reported, was the question of how to define which nations count as vulnerable developing countries, making them eligible for money from a “loss and damage” fund agreed at Cop27 in Egypt.
While rapidly slashing emissions by 2030 is critical, countries also need to become more resilient to climate impacts at a faster pace. For example, access to clean energy and technologies will improve health and air quality, which especially benefits women and children, the IPCC noted. But becoming more resilient gets harder with every sliver of warming.
The IPCC also stated that enough money exists in the global financial system to cut emissions. It just needs to be funnelled in the right directions. “Accelerated climate action will only come about if there is a many-fold increase in finance. Insufficient and misaligned finance is holding back progress,” said author Christopher Trisos.
Mr Gutteres yesterday called for an “Acceleration Agenda” which would stop the licensing or funding of new oil and gas – consistent with the findings of the non-partisan and influential International Energy Agency. He also called for both public and private funding of coal to be halted internationally, an end to the expansion of existing oil and gas reserves, and shifting subsidies from fossil fuels to the transition to clean energy.
Governments need to up their public funding for climate action and give clear signals to investors, while central banks and financial regulators must play a part, the IPCC said. Technology, knowhow, and policy measures should be shared in order to give every community a chance to avoid being locked into carbon-intensive futures.
Cities and urban areas offer the chance to rapidly scale up changes to food, electricity, transport, industry, buildings, and land use. And all the while, low-carbon lifestyles will improve people’s health and wellbeing. “In short, our world needs climate action on all fronts – everything, everywhere, all at once,” Mr Guterres concluded. “We don’t have a moment to lose.”