Top climate scientist declares ambitious 2 deg C climate goal ‘dead’

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(FILES) This underwater photo taken on June 14, 2024 shows bleached corals around Koh Tao island in the southern Thai province of Surat Thani. Coral reefs could vanish in as little as a decade, warned a landmark UN report by dozens of global experts on December 17, 2024, impacting nearly one billion people who benefit from these highly threatened marine ecosystems. "Coral reefs are the most endangered ecosystems and may disappear globally in the next 10 to 50 years," said the report by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. (Photo by Lillian SUWANRUMPHA / AFP)

Temperatures are forecast to stay at or above 1.5 deg C in the coming years, devastating coral reefs and fuelling more intense storms.

PHOTO: AFP

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Holding long-term global warming to 2 deg C – the fallback target of the Paris climate accord – is now “impossible”, according to a stark analysis published by leading scientists.

Led by renowned climatologist James Hansen, the paper appears in the journal Environment: Science And Policy For Sustainable Development and concludes that earth’s climate is more sensitive to rising greenhouse gas emissions than previously thought.

Compounding the crisis, Professor Hansen and colleagues argue, is a recent decline in sunlight-blocking aerosol pollution from the shipping industry, which had been mitigating some of the warming.

An ambitious climate change scenario outlined by the UN’s climate panel, which gives the planet a 50 per cent chance of keeping warming under 2 deg C by the year 2100, “is an implausible scenario”, Prof Hansen told a briefing on Feb 4.

“That scenario is now impossible,” said Prof Hansen, formerly a top Nasa climate scientist who famously announced to the US Congress in 1988 that global warming was under way.

“The 2 deg C target is dead.”

Instead, he and the co-authors argue, the amount of greenhouse gases already pumped into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels meant increased warming is now guaranteed.

Temperatures will stay at or above 1.5 deg C in the coming years – devastating coral reefs and fuelling more intense storms – before rising to around 2 deg C by 2045, they forecast.

They estimate that polar ice melt and freshwater injection into the North Atlantic will trigger the shutdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (Amoc) within the next 20 to 30 years.

The current brings warmth to various parts of the globe and also carries nutrients necessary to sustain ocean life.

Its end “will lock in major problems, including sea-level rise of several metres – thus, we describe Amoc shutdown as the ‘point of no return’”, the paper argues.

The world’s nations agreed during the landmark Paris climate accord of 2015 to try to hold end-of-century warming to 1.5 deg C above pre-industrial levels.

Scientists identified the threshold as critical to preventing the breakdown of major ocean circulation systems, the abrupt thawing of boreal permafrost, and the collapse of tropical coral reefs.

The 1.5 deg C target has already been breached over the past two years, according to data from the European Union’s climate monitoring system Copernicus, though the Paris Agreement referred to a long-term trend over decades.

At 2 deg C, the impact would be even greater, including irreversible loss of the earth’s ice sheets, mountain glaciers and snow, sea ice and permafrost.

The authors acknowledge that the findings appeared grim, but argue that honesty is a necessary ingredient for change.

“Failure to be realistic in climate assessment and failure to call out the fecklessness of current policies to stem global warming is not helpful to young people,” they said.

“Today, with rising crises including global climate change, we have reached a point where we must address the problem of special interests,” they added, stressing that they were “optimistic” for the future. AFP

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