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Date: 2024-05-15 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00018443

Climate Crisis
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World ‘way off track’ on climate targets, UN experts warn after five hottest years on record

Burgess COMMENTARY
World progress is way off track to achieve sustainable climate stability and in my view will stay in this catastrophic mode as long as economic performance dominates every decision that gets made and social impacts and environmental impacts are discounted. This is insane ... but to be expected when madness prevails!
Peter Burgess
World ‘way off track’ on climate targets, UN experts warn after five hottest years on record ‘Urgent and far-reaching’ action needed to avoid missing Paris agreement’s global warming limit, says World Meteorological Organisation Chris Baynes 1 day ago 21 comments The world is 'way off track' from meeting targets to limit global warming as the signs of a climate emergency grow more damaging, the United Nations has warned. Increasing heat, accelerating sea level rises, and extreme weather in 2019 were all indications of the impact of failing to rein in carbon emissions, said a report compiled by the UN's World Meteorological Organisation (WMO). The agency warned urgent and far-reaching climate action was needed if the world was to limit global warming to 1.5C or 2C, as required under the international Paris Agreement on climate change. Last year was the second hottest year on record, with a global average temperature of 1.1C above pre-industrial levels, the report confirms. The years from 2015 to 2019 were the five warmest on record and the last decade was the hottest since records began in the 19th century. TOP ARTICLES 1/6 READ MORE Coronavirus: UK's 'inadequate' statutory sick pay rate among lowest in Europe Climate change in the world's fastest-warming town Show all 18 Each decade since the 1980s has been hotter than any preceding decade stretching back to 1850, according to the WMO’s report, which has input from national meteorological services, international experts, scientific institutions and other UN agencies. Those trends have continued in 2020. January was the warmest on record globally and Europe saw “by far” its hottest winter to date, according to the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. New temperature highs have been reported in Antarctica, along with large-scale ice melts and a fracturing glacier which will have 'repercussions for sea level rise', WMO secretary-general Petteri Taalas warned. Under the Paris Agreement, countries are expected to increase their action this year to tackle greenhouse gas emissions to prevent the worst impacts of global warming. In a foreword to the report, UN secretary general Antonio Guterres said: 'We are currently way off track to meeting either the 1.5C or 2C targets that the Paris Agreement calls for. Read more Why space could be the key to tackling the climate crisis PM must not use coronavirus to delay vital decisions on climate crisis Tropical forests’ ability to absorb carbon nearing ‘tipping point’ How to cope with climate change anxiety 'This report outlines the latest science and illustrates the urgency for far-reaching climate action.' Prof Taalas said: 'Given that greenhouse gas levels continue to increase, the warming will continue.' He added it was an only matter of time before the world a new record hot year – with predictions it will come within five years. Alongside temperature increases, rainfall changes are having a major impact on several countries and sea levels are rising at an increasing pace, exposing coastal areas and islands to a greater risk of flooding and submersion, the report said. Preliminary data indicates greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere continued to rise in 2019, and carbon emissions from global fossil fuels grew 0.6 per cent last year. The report detailed the harmful impacts on people and wildlife caused by surging temperatures across the world. There were two major heatwaves in Europe, in June and July, with new national temperature records set in the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and France. Climate change is facilitating the spread of dengue fever, with around half the world population now at risk of infection and a large increase in cases in 2019, the report noted. World hunger is on the rise again, and an estimated 22 million people worldwide were forced to leave their homes by events such as floods and storms, the WMO added. Climate change: Decade's defining issue in pictures Show all 20 California Athens, Greece Redding, California Athens, Greece

The contiguous US – excluding Alaska, Hawaii and other islands – experienced the highest 12-month rainfall on record from July 2018 to June 2019, and flooding cost the country an estimated $20bn (£15bn) last year.

Drought or low rainfall hit many parts of the world, including Australia, which also saw its hottest year and December on record and an exceptionally long and severe season of wildfires.

Some parts of the Arctic also burned in wildfires – an extremely rare occurrence – and sea ice in the region continued to decline.

The Greenland ice sheet lost 329 billion tonnes of ice in 2019, well above the average for recent years, and glaciers continue to melt.

Sea levels rose to record highs last year, and at least 84 per cent of the oceans experienced at least one marine heatwave.

Warming ocean temperatures, along with more acidic water and lower oxygen levels, are having an impact on marine wildlife and habitats such as coral, the report said.

Another report published by climate think tank Ember this week warned countries must 'dramatically accelerate' a shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy to have any chance of meeting Paris Agreement targets.
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