Climate change the defining challenge of our age
Latest IPCC report - and last one for five years (according to plans; I suspect we'll see more from IPCC before five years elapse) is out. And, as expected, the news is grim.
From Bloomberg:
Climate change may continue for centuries, and governments will have to spend billions of dollars annually to slow warming and adapt to its effects, a United Nations panel said.Warming is ``unequivocal,'' and is causing Arctic ice to melt, rain to decline in parts of Africa and the Mediterranean, and sea levels to rise, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said today in its fourth report of the year. Clean technologies are available to cut emissions of greenhouse gases and more political action is needed to achieve this, it said.
``Slowing and reversing these threats is the defining challenge of our age,'' UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told a news conference in Valencia, Spain. Calling the panel's report a policy ``guidepost,'' he said: ``It contains one overarching message for all of us, that there are real and affordable ways to deal with climate change.''
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A continuation of current policies will by 2100 cause bigger effects from greenhouse gas emissions than those seen last century, including a sea level rise of 18 to 59 centimeters (7 to 23 inches) and a temperature increase of 1.1 to 6.4 degrees Celsius (2.0 to 11.5 degrees Fahrenheit), the panel said.Even stabilizing greenhouse gases at current atmospheric levels would entail an eventual temperature rise beyond 2100 of at least 2 degrees Celsius, and a sea level increase of at least 40 centimeters, the panel said.
``Anthropogenic warming and sea level rise would continue for centuries due to the timescales associated with climate processes and feedbacks, even if greenhouse gas concentrations were to be stabilised,'' the panel wrote.
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``Climate change is here already. This document provides all the evidence that is necessary,'' Hans Verolme, director of the climate change program for WWF International, said in an interview. ``Policymakers can't say: `I did not know, I wasn't there, and I wasn't told what to do.' The report makes very clear if we don't act in the next 10 years, we're fried.''
Global Warming to Continue for Centuries, UN Says
From the International Herald Tribune:
Far more powerfully then ever before, members of the UN panel said Saturday that their review of the data had led them to conclude that reductions in greenhouse gases had to start immediately to avert a global climate disaster that could leave island states submerged and abandoned, decrease African crop yields by 50 percent and lower global economic output by 5 percent or more.The panel, co-winner of this year's Nobel Peace Prize, said the world would have to reverse the growth of greenhouse gas emissions by 2015 to avert major problems. "If there's no action before 2012, that's too late, there is not time," said Rajendra Pachauri, a scientist and economist who heads the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. "What we do in the next 2-3 years will determine our future. This is the defining moment."
He said that since the panel began its work 5 years ago, scientists had recorded "much stronger trends in climate change" like an unpredicted melt of polar ice in recent years. "That means you better start with intervention much earlier," he said.
Ban calls climate change 'defining challenge of our age'
Comments
Climate change is a threat to humanity as a whole
UN Development Programme likewise expressing massive concerns re climate change.
Press release begins:
you can obtain this and other press releases and info, including the report, from
Human Development Report Office