"The point of no return
is no longer over the horizon," António Guterres warned ahead of COP 25.
"It is in sight and hurtling toward us."
Sunday, December 01, 2019
On the eve of the United Nations
Climate Change Conference, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres decried the
"utterly inadequate" efforts of governments to curb planet-heating
emissions and called for "a clear demonstration of increased ambition and
commitment" from world leaders to tackle the crisis.
"For many decades the
human species has been at war with the planet. And the planet is fighting
back," Guterres told reporters
in Madrid Sunday. "We are confronted now with a global climate crisis. The
point of no return is no longer over the horizon. It is in sight and hurtling
towards us."
"Our war against nature
must stop," he declared. "And we know that that is possible. The
scientific community has provided us with the roadmap to achieve this."
Guterres referenced various
U.N.-affiliated reports from recent years, including three released in the
weeks leading up to COP 25, the climate conference that will begin Monday and
run through Dec. 13.
The annual Emissions Gap report, published Tuesday
by the U.N. Environment Program (UNEP), warned that global temperatures are on
track to rise as
much as 3.2°C by the end of the century and countries' commitments
under the 2015 Paris agreement—a key focus of the upcoming conference—are
insufficient to avert climate catastrophe.
The latest Greenhouse Gas
Bulletin, published Monday
by the World Meteorological Organization, revealed that levels of long-lived
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere hit record highs in 2018. The previous week,
the UNEP and leading research organizations published The
Production Gap, which found that planned levels of fossil fuel production
through 2030 are "dangerously out of step" with the Paris accord
goals.
"According to the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, we must limit global temperature
rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, reach carbon neutrality by 2050, and reduce
greenhouse gas emissions by 45 percent from 2010 levels by 2030," Guterres
noted. "The commitments made in Paris would still lead to an increase in
temperature above three degrees Celsius. But many countries are not even
meeting those commitments."
Expressing concern about the
"alarming rate" at which greenhouse gas emissions are growing, the
U.N. chief highlighted The Production Gap's finding that the world is set
to produce 120 percent more fossil fuels over the next decade than what is
consistent with a 1.5-degree pathway.
As coal, gas, and oil
production continues, "climate-related natural disasters are becoming more
frequent, more deadly, more destructive, with growing human and financial
costs," Guterres pointed out. "Drought in some parts of the world is
progressing at alarming rates destroying human habitats and endangering food
security. Every year, air pollution, associated to climate change, kills seven
million people. Climate change has become a dramatic threat to human health and
security."
Guterres called for ensuring
that $100 billion dollars is available for developing countries to use for
mitigation and adaptation to the climate crisis. He also emphasized the need
for "more ambitious national commitments" to reduce
emissions—especially from major polluters—and stressed that such commitments
should "include a just transition for people whose jobs and livelihoods
are affected as we move from the grey to the green economy."
Governments across the globe
face growing pressure from the public—particularly young people—to step up
their climate action to meet the level of the crisis, noted Guterres, whose
remarks to reporters Sunday came just two days after a youth-led
worldwide climate
strike that aimed to push COP 25 attendees to pursue more ambitious
policies.
"What is still lacking is
political will," Guterres said. "Political will to put a price on
carbon. Political will to stop subsidies on fossil fuels. Political will to
stop building coal power plants from 2020 onwards. Political will to shift
taxation from income to carbon—taxing pollution instead of people. We simply
have to stop digging and drilling and take advantage of the vast possibilities
offered by renewable energy and nature-based solutions."
Although Guterres didn't
criticize any nations or leaders by name—including U.S. President Donald Trump,
who began formally
withdrawing the United States from the Paris accord last month—the
secretary-general chided the world's largest emitters for "not pulling
their weight" and warned that "without them, our goal is
unreachable."
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