The world is falling into an “abyss of risk,” said Prof Johan Rockström of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany. Reports published this week by three U.N. agencies all point to the failure of governments to make — and keep — sufficient commitments to ensure that global temperatures will not rise by more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, which was the target in the 2015 Paris agreement. This is the worst possible news, and arrives just a week before this year’s round of climate talks, Cop27, is due to open in Egypt.

So far human activities have raised the temperature by around 1C on average. If current pledges on emissions are fulfilled, that figure is expected to rise to 2.5C. That would — and probably will — mean destruction on a scale that is hard to imagine, even after what we have already witnessed, most recently with devastating floods in Pakistan but also record-breaking heatwaves and other extreme weather elsewhere.

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(4) comments

edkahl

There is no climate catastrophic and to the extent people keep saying this, it de-values climate science. The biggest unsolved problem of green energy is the cost of battery storage for when there's no sun or wind. The one ready to go technology that solves the storage problem is to make hydrogen with solar and wind solar. Germany, Saudi Arabia and many other countries are investing billions in this but sadly our state politicians are taking a pass on it. It makes one suspect they prefer an issue to raise money from than a solution.

Terence Y

I’m sorry, but is this the same climate talks conference where attendees fly in on public and private jets, where they’re whisked around in limos, and where they attend conferences in air-conditioned rooms? Where attendees lecture us on carbon footprints while they exceed their carbon footprint by thousands? As soon as they can get their hypocrisy under control, then talk to the rest of us. I’m glad to see more countries are ignoring the climate scam.

Dirk van Ulden

I don't know whether anyone saw the report on climate activists in the Netherlands who by the hundreds blocked the area of private jets parked at Schiphol Airport. This in an attempt to prevent the Green Hypocrites from flying in their jets to Egypt. It was quite a hilarious spectacle.

edkahl

There is no realistic way to reduce man's CO2 emissions because China emits more CO2 than the US, India and Europe combined. CO2 reductions will have no measurable effect on CO2 levels without China's involvement. The only way to get China on board is to develop green energy that’s less expensive than fossil fuels. The private sector is spending hundreds of billions to do this and it is likely that producing hydrogen from solar and wind could be cheaper than fossil fuels. There’s a reason hydrogen is used for rocket fuel.

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