Climate report is a Code red for humanity says UN secretary general
A report providing irrefutable evidence that global warming is caused by human activity, and showing that its effects are likely to worsen, has led to widespread calls for more ambitious targets to be adopted by global leaders.
The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, compiled by more than 230 climate scientists, warns that major climate disruption is inevitable and, in many instances, irreversible.
It says rising sea levels, driven by carbon emissions, are likely to persist for many hundreds of years and the climate crisis âis unequivocally caused by human activitiesâ, most notably fossil fuel usage.
The report says that if emissions do not fall in the next 20 years, a 3-degree rise looks likely, shattering any hope of containing temperature increase to 1.5 degrees â" a key Paris Agreement target.
This would have widespread catastrophic effects, especially in the form of more frequent extreme weather events. If emissions do not fall at all, the report says the world will be on track for a 4 to 5-degree increase this century, which scientists have previously warned would make for an unliveable planet.
UN secretary general António Guterres led calls for global ambition in cutting emissions to be scaled up to enhance the likelihood of a meaningful outcome at Novemberâs international COP26 summit in Glasgow.
âTodayâs IPCC Working Group 1 Report is a âCode Redâ for humanity... This report must sound a death knell for coal and fossil fuels, before they destroy our planet,â he said.
Irelandâs most senior scientist with the IPCC, Prof Peter Thorne of Maynooth University, said the findings demonstrated that âthe choices we make today will reverberate for millennia to comeâ.
He said in order to limit global warming, strong, rapid and sustained reductions in carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases were necessary.
âHarrowingâProf Thorne said the findings on the potential rise in sea levels âare quite harrowingâ for Ireland.
âWe are potentially bequeathing to future generations an island of Ireland that looks a lot different,â he said. âCan you imagine the implications for Galway and Cork? We would have to retreat from the great cities of Ireland.â
Minster for Climate Eamon Ryan said the report provided âever greater certainty about climate change and ever greater urgency about the need to tackle itâ.
âIf global temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees above pre-industrial levels, there will be critical consequences for agriculture and health,â he said.
Mr Ryan said nations should use COP26 to respond to the immediate threat, but expressed concern that the same energy and momentum that led to the landmark Paris Agreement in 2015 did not appear to be present.
Regarding Ireland, he said changes in land use, including agriculture and rewetting peatlands, would not only reduce emissions but increase resilience by providing âmuch better protection against what we know is comingâ.
The Government is set to publish its Climate Action Plan next month and the Climate Change Advisory Council is working to set an overall carbon budget, which is due to be announced in the autumn.
Once that draft budget is announced, Mr Ryan will consult Cabinet colleagues on the carbon ceilings to be put in place for each sector.
AgricultureIrish officials are examining the implications of technical changes under consideration by the IPCC on how methane emissions are calculated, which were flagged in the report. Sources indicated these changes, if adopted, could significantly reduce the total figure for agricultural methane emissions in Ireland, but that emissions reductions would still be required from the sector.
Minister for Agriculture Charlie McConalogue said âclimate change is a reality and farmers, more than most, are aware of that and dealing with the impact of extreme weather conditionsâ.
Dr Hannah Daly, an emissions expert with UCCâs MaREI institute, said many would feel a sense of despair from the IPCC report.
âA certain amount of damaging global warming is locked in, and extreme weather events will become more frequent and damaging until we completely stop emitting greenhouse gases,â she said. âEvery choice, every emission, and every bit of warming matters. How bad climate change will get depends on our actions and choices from now.â
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