PanamaTimes

Friday, Jul 26, 2024

Climate change: 'Political and economic madness' to invest in fossil fuels warns UN, as landmark report asks us to change lifestyles

Climate change: 'Political and economic madness' to invest in fossil fuels warns UN, as landmark report asks us to change lifestyles

The summary, referred to as a 'litany of broken promises' by the UN, warns current fossil fuel plans put the world on course for 2C warming, but carbon capture and lifestyle changes can help.

It is "moral and economic madness" to fund new fossil fuel projects, the United Nations (UN) chief said today, as a pioneering report warned simply cutting emissions was no longer enough to curb the climate crisis.

The need to scale up the measures to remove carbon dioxide from the air are now "unavoidable" in order to meet net zero goals, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said in a landmark document.

The UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres called the climate report a "litany of broken climate promises... cataloguing the empty pledges that put us firmly on track towards an unliveable world".

Campaigners may be regarded as radicals, the "truly dangerous radicals" are those countries increasing fossil fuel production, he said, calling for a trebled pace in the shift to renewables.

His comments land as the British government considers increased oil and gas production from the North Sea, with many states seeking to wean themselves off fossil fuels from Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine.

While the Ukraine war "may reduce the media coverage" of the report in some countries, many are now more aware of the "multiple risks associated with dependence on fossil fuels, including energy insecurity and unaffordability as well as climate change," Bob Ward, policy director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics, told Sky News.

The report, commissioned and endorsed by 195 governments, warns current fossil fuel plans put the world on course for 2C warming. It also urges an end to all fossil fuel subsidies and new coal plants and warns oil and gas will become stranded assets in the next few decades.

Eleventh hour wrangling between nations delayed its publication. Sky News understands oil-rich Saudi Arabia queried some fossil fuel language and India pushed for a distinction in responsibilities for developing and developed countries - though the United States pushed back.

The need for carbon dioxide removals


The report is the strongest yet on the need for carbon dioxide removals: ways to suck carbon out of the air including technologies that store it underground or harnessing natural methods like oceans, soils and trees to soak it up.

It says we have enough space underground to store permanently all the CO2 emissions we need to limit warming to 1.5C, but globally carbon capture and storage deployment is "far below" the level needed. In 2015 the UK government cancelled £1bn of promised funding for the technology.

Campaigners fear that carbon dioxide removals distract from the need to cut emissions, but scientists have been at pains to stress that the world desperately needs both.

Prof Michael Grubb, a lead author, said these methods would not "ride to the rescue" of fossil fuel industries. They should only be available to offset areas where emissions reductions are likely impossible, such as like aviation and cement, he said.

There is no question we are "cooked" without drastic emissions cuts, Sir David King, former UK Government chief scientific adviser and founder of the Climate Crisis Advisory Group, told Sky News. "

But he said we are beginning to see a "very significant beginning of a change of tactic within the IPCC," with more emphasis on greenhouse removals at scale.

Key points:


*  Both "rapid and deep and in most cases immediate" emissions cuts and greenhouse gas removals are essential to reach 1.5C

*  For the first time a whole chapter highlights how changes diets, lifestyles, shopping habits and travel can reduce emissions. But structural and cultural change are essential too

*  Emissions in the last decade were highest in history, though rate of growth has slowed

*  We have enough space underground to lock away all the CO2 emissions we need to from now until 2100 to keep us at 1.5C, but we aren't deploying that technology fast enough

*  Many types of renewable energy have become increasingly cheap, viable and used

*  Countries are not matching promises with policies

The cost of some forms of renewables and electric vehicles have fallen, and their use continues to rise, IPCC finds


'Glass half full'


Amid the bleak warnings came some reasons for hope, including the dramatic fall in the cost of renewables.

"The report very much paints a picture of glass half empty, half full - but rising," Prof Grubb told Sky News.

It says the world already has the technologies, expertise, and financial potential across all sectors to halve global greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.

And for the first time it dedicates a whole chapter to changes many consumers can make to reduce demand for fossil fuels.

What are the IPCC reports?


Today's landmark report is the final of three issued over the past eight months, with February's report focusing on impacts and last summer's on the science. They are seen as the most authoritative reports in the world and inform discussions at the annual COP climate summit.

The reports are issued every six to seven years, and the one focusing on mitigation, like today's, is often the most contentious because it concerns what leaders, businesses and citizens must do to cut climate heating pollution.

Hundreds of scientists compiled the report from thousands of studies over seven years, before the summary was scrutinised by 195 governments and finally signed off today. While the language of such reports has become more emphatic as evidence mounts, the consensual nature of the process means the strongest warnings could have been tempered.

Newsletter

Related Articles

PanamaTimes
0:00
0:00
Close
Mexican Drug Lords El Mayo and El Chapo's Son Arrested in Texas
World's Hottest Day Recorded on July 21
Joe Biden Withdraws from 2024 US Presidential Race
A Week of Turmoil: Key Moments in US Politics
Global IT Outage Sparks Major Concerns
Global IT Outage Unveils Digital Vulnerabilities
Secret Service Criticized for Lack of Sniper Protection During Trump Shooting
Colombian Court Annuls Amazon Tribes’ Carbon Credit Deal
Sunita Williams Safe on ISS, to Address Earth on July 10
Biden Affirms Commitment To Presidential Race
Boeing Pleads Guilty Over 737 MAX Crashes
Beryl Storm Hits Texas, Killing 2 and Causing Major Power Outages
2024 Predicted to Be World's Hottest Year
Macron Faces New Political Challenges Despite Election Relief
Florida Man Arrested Over Attempt to Withdraw One Cent
Anger mounts at Biden’s top team after disastrous debate
Bolivian President Luis Arce Denies 'Self-Coup' Allegations
Steve Bannon Begins 4-Month Prison Sentence
Biden Warns of 'Dangerous Precedent' After Supreme Court Immunity Ruling in Trump Case
Elon Musk Accuses Kamala Harris of Misleading Post on Trump's Abortion Stance
Hunter Biden Sues Fox News Over 'Revenge Porn' Allegations
New York Times Editorial Board Urges Biden to Exit Presidential Race
US Supreme Court Overturns Obstruction Charges Against January 6 Rioters
US Voters Prefer Biden's Democracy Approach, Trump's Economy Plan: Report
Attempted Coup in Bolivia: President Urges Public Mobilization
Top-Secret US Underwater Drone 'Manta Ray' Revealed on Google Maps
United States Bans Kaspersky Antivirus
Inside El Salvador’s 40,000 Inmate Mega-Prison
Toyota, Mazda, Honda, and Suzuki have committed fraud; falsified safety test results
El Salvador's Bitcoin Holdings Reach $350 Million
Teens Forming Friendships with AI Chatbots
WhatsApp Rolls Out Major Redesign
Neuralink's First Brain Implant Experiences Issue
Apple Unveils New iPad Pro with M4 Chip, Misleading AI Claims
OpenAI to Announce Google Search Competitor
Apple Apologizes for Controversial iPad Pro Ad Featuring Instrument Destruction
German politician of the AFD party, Marie-Thérèse Kaiser was just convicted & fined $6,000+
Changpeng Zhao Sentenced to Four Months in Jail
Biden Administration to Relax Marijuana Regulations
101-Year-Old Woman Mistaken for a Baby by American Airlines: Comical Mix-Up during Flight Check-in
King Charles and Camilla enjoying the Inuit voice singing performance in Canada.
New Study: Vaping May Lower Fertility in Women Trying to Get Pregnant
U.S. DOJ Seeks Three-Year Sentence for Binance Founder Changpeng Zhao
Headlines - Thursday, 23 April 2024
Illinois Woman Wins $45M Lawsuit Against Johnson & Johnson and Kenvue for Mesothelioma Linked to Baby Powder
Panama's lates news for Friday, April 19
Creative menu of a Pizza restaurant..
You can be a very successful player, but a player with character is another level!
Experience the Future of Dining: My Visit to an AI-Powered Burger Joint
Stabbing rampage terror attack in Sydney, at least four people killed, early reports that a baby was among those stabbed.
×