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Three years left before best chance of managing global temperature rise is lost

Three years left before best chance of managing global temperature rise is lost

A team of scientists from 17 countries including Ireland have calculated the remaining 'carbon budget' and warn it is set to run out in 2028.
Their warning comes with a slew of new data that shows all the measurements of climate change moving in the wrong direction.
Sea level, for example, has risen twice as fast over the last six years compared to the previous century as warming oceans expand and ice caps melt more rapidly than before.
The surge is revealed in a collaboration by 61 experts from 54 universities and institutes published today.
They warn that the Earth's atmosphere can take only three more years of carbon and other greenhouse gases being pumped out at today's rate before hitting a critical stage.
At that point, the accumulation of warming gases is expected to be beyond what would provide a 50pc chance of keeping global temperature rise to 1.5C.
Preventing temperature rise exceeding 1.5C is the aim of the landmark Paris Agreement signed by almost all the world's nations in 2015.
Technically, the agreement is not broken by breaching 1.5C because it refers to that level of temperature rise being sustained over several decades.
However, the scientists behind the Indicators of Global Climate Change (IGCC) initiative point out that the 1.5C mark was already exceeded in 2024 and, while this was a record-breaking year, the likelihood of it being repeated sooner and often is increasing all the time.
The IGCC initiative was set up to provide annual updates on climate change in between publication of the flagship reports of the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC), which are produced only every six or seven years.
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Its latest report shows rapid changes since the last report was published in 2021.
Annual emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), the most common and long-lasting greenhouse gas, rose by 1.3pc.
The amount of CO2 accumulated in the atmosphere increased by 3.1pc while concentration of methane, which has a shorter lifespan but greater short-term warming impact, increased by 3.4pc.
Average temperature rise grew by 13.8pc and the remaining carbon budget dwindled by 74pc – from 500 billion tonnes of CO2 to 130 billion tonnes at the start of 2025.
Sea levels rose by 26mm, counting from 2019, giving an average increase of 4.3mm per year compared to an average of 1.8mm per year over the previous 120 years.
'This seemingly small number is having an outsized impact on low-lying coastal areas, making storm surges more damaging and causing more coastal erosion,' said Dr Aimee Slangen, of the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research.
'The concerning part is that we know that sea level rise in response to climate change is relatively slow, which means that we have already locked in further increases in the coming years and decades.'

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We can't afford to let the climate crisis get swallowed up in the culture wars
We can't afford to let the climate crisis get swallowed up in the culture wars

Irish Times

time6 days ago

  • Irish Times

We can't afford to let the climate crisis get swallowed up in the culture wars

Last week brought grim news about climate change , with the latest scientific assessments recognising that the 1.5 degree temperature increase, which was set as a goal in the Paris climate agreement, will now inevitably be breached. Another critical study showed that the climate impacts from what we have already put into the atmosphere will hit home far quicker and harder than most earlier models had predicted. Perhaps the scariest thing was that the news cycles barely paused to register these developments, as if people are too stunned by everything else going on in the world to notice. Or that they've heard it all before and prefer to believe those sceptical political voices who are sowing division and doubt for their own short-term electoral gain. In this vital decade of change, we are like a football team going into half-time 3-1 down, against a side that is full of certainty and mocking derision. There is a real risk the focus will turn to just managing the damage and not on making the evolutionary leap we need to make to address the root cause of the crisis. While the sceptics are full of swagger, I don't believe they will win out in the end. The vast majority of people are still deeply worried about the issue and want it addressed. It is not as if there can be any winners in this contest because every country is at risk. And that underlying common cause should help us turn things around. READ MORE Although the situation is dire and global emissions continue to rise, the one score in our favour is that some core climate solutions are coming much faster than predicted. Clean energy technologies such as solar and battery power are expanding at an exponential pace. We can also see how quickly biodiversity bounces back when good, nature-based solutions are put in place. Change is hard, but once ramped up we can increasingly see how it will help us all build healthier and stronger local communities, while also addressing the global threat. The three scores against us are all own goals that can be overturned given the right political will. The first relates to the fact that while investments in the clean and green revolution are happening in the US, Europe and China, the rest of the developing world, where the investment is needed most, is lagging behind. We know we need to raise $1.3 trillion (€1.1 trillion) of climate finance in developing countries each year to close that gap. Agreeing the necessary commitments and mechanisms to deliver this finance should not be an impossible task, given it amounts to less than 1 per cent of the $115 trillion global economy. Failure to deliver should not be a negotiating option. The second own goal is that some political parties and businesses are delaying the transition to protect their profits or shore up their electoral base. The solution here has to be to stick to the commitments and transparency mechanisms already required under the Paris climate agreement. We need to start here at home by agreeing to the targeted 90 per cent reduction in emissions by 2040, which the European Commission has proposed. At the same time, we should support international trade and investment agreements that favour countries and businesses who are joining the effort. [ Capitalism is incompatible with any kind of human flourishing on this planet Opens in new window ] The third and perhaps most critical thing we need to reverse is the way in which the climate issue has become part of a wider cultural war. We need governments to ensure that there is a just transition so that no one is left behind and the public has faith in what is happening. This will help the political centre to hold. We will also need a wider perspective because the cultural war has deep foundations, which cannot simply be ignored. No amount of economic argument or technological optimism alone is going to motivate us to meet the scale of the challenge ahead. It is time for artists, philosophers and theologians to stand up and help inspire and direct our actions. We need an alternative narrative that better addresses the underlying fears the reactionary side is able to feed off. That fightback could start today in London, where the Brazilian COP presidency is hosting the first of six global ethical stock-take events to look creatively at how we can tackle disinformation and promote new business models and cultural and spiritual perspectives. [ There are several ingenious tacks we can take to help cut our emissions Opens in new window ] Brazil is putting forward a concept it calls the 'mutirão', which comes from its indigenous culture and signifies a community coming together to work on a shared task, much like our own tradition of working on a meitheal. If we can get the culture right, then people will show up – and the politics and policies will surely follow.

Three years left before best chance of managing global temperature rise is lost
Three years left before best chance of managing global temperature rise is lost

Irish Independent

time19-06-2025

  • Irish Independent

Three years left before best chance of managing global temperature rise is lost

A team of scientists from 17 countries including Ireland have calculated the remaining 'carbon budget' and warn it is set to run out in 2028. Their warning comes with a slew of new data that shows all the measurements of climate change moving in the wrong direction. Sea level, for example, has risen twice as fast over the last six years compared to the previous century as warming oceans expand and ice caps melt more rapidly than before. The surge is revealed in a collaboration by 61 experts from 54 universities and institutes published today. They warn that the Earth's atmosphere can take only three more years of carbon and other greenhouse gases being pumped out at today's rate before hitting a critical stage. At that point, the accumulation of warming gases is expected to be beyond what would provide a 50pc chance of keeping global temperature rise to 1.5C. Preventing temperature rise exceeding 1.5C is the aim of the landmark Paris Agreement signed by almost all the world's nations in 2015. Technically, the agreement is not broken by breaching 1.5C because it refers to that level of temperature rise being sustained over several decades. However, the scientists behind the Indicators of Global Climate Change (IGCC) initiative point out that the 1.5C mark was already exceeded in 2024 and, while this was a record-breaking year, the likelihood of it being repeated sooner and often is increasing all the time. The IGCC initiative was set up to provide annual updates on climate change in between publication of the flagship reports of the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC), which are produced only every six or seven years. ADVERTISEMENT Its latest report shows rapid changes since the last report was published in 2021. Annual emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), the most common and long-lasting greenhouse gas, rose by 1.3pc. The amount of CO2 accumulated in the atmosphere increased by 3.1pc while concentration of methane, which has a shorter lifespan but greater short-term warming impact, increased by 3.4pc. Average temperature rise grew by 13.8pc and the remaining carbon budget dwindled by 74pc – from 500 billion tonnes of CO2 to 130 billion tonnes at the start of 2025. Sea levels rose by 26mm, counting from 2019, giving an average increase of 4.3mm per year compared to an average of 1.8mm per year over the previous 120 years. 'This seemingly small number is having an outsized impact on low-lying coastal areas, making storm surges more damaging and causing more coastal erosion,' said Dr Aimee Slangen, of the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research. 'The concerning part is that we know that sea level rise in response to climate change is relatively slow, which means that we have already locked in further increases in the coming years and decades.'

Climate indicators 'moving in wrong direction'
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RTÉ News​

time19-06-2025

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Climate indicators 'moving in wrong direction'

From carbon pollution to sea-level rise to global heating, the pace and level of key climate change indicators are all in uncharted territory, more than 60 top scientists warned. Greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels and deforestation hit a new high in 2024 and averaged, over the last decade, a record 53.6 billion tonnes per year - that is 100,000 tonnes per minute - of CO2 or its equivalent in other gases, they reported in a peer-reviewed update. Earth's surface temperature last year breached 1.5 degrees Celsius for the first time, and the additional CO2 humanity can emit with a two-thirds chance of staying under that threshold long-term - our 1.5C "carbon budget" - will be exhausted in a couple of years, they calculated. Investment in clean energy outpaced investment in oil, gas and coal last year two-to-one, but fossil fuels account for more than 80% of global energy consumption, and growth in renewables still lags behind new demand. Included in the 2015 Paris climate treaty as an aspirational goal, the 1.5C limit has since been validated by science as necessary for avoiding a catastrophically climate-addled world. The hard cap on warming to which nearly 200 nations agreed was "well below" two degrees, commonly interpreted to mean 1.7C to 1.8C. "We are already in crunch time for these higher levels of warming," co-author Joeri Rogelj, a professor of climate science and policy at Imperial College London, told journalists in a briefing. "The next three or four decades is pretty much the timeline over which we expect a peak in warming to happen," he added. 'The wrong direction' No less alarming than record heat and carbon emissions is the gathering pace at which these and other climate indicators are shifting, according to the study, published in Earth System Science Data. Human-induced warming increased over the last decade at a rate "unprecedented in the instrumental record", and well above the 2010-2019 average registered in the UN's most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, in 2021. The new findings - led by the same scientists using essentially the same methods - are intended as an authoritative albeit unofficial update of the benchmark IPCC reports underpinning global climate diplomacy. They should be taken as a reality check by policymakers, the authors suggested. "I tend to be an optimistic person," said lead author Piers Forster, head of the University of Leeds Priestley Centre for Climate Futures. "But if you look at this year's update, things are all moving in the wrong direction," he added. The rate at which sea levels have shot up in recent years is also alarming, the scientists said. After creeping up, on average, well under two millimetres per year from 1901 to 2018, global oceans have risen 4.3mm annually since 2019. What happens next An increase in the ocean watermark of 23cm - the width of a letter-sized sheet of paper - over the last 125 years has been enough to imperil many small island states and hugely amplify the destructive power of storm surges worldwide. An additional 20cm of sea level rise by 2050 would cause one trillion dollars in flood damage annually in the world's 136 largest coastal cities, earlier research has shown. Another indicator underlying all the changes in the climate system is Earth's so-called energy imbalance, the difference between the amount of solar energy entering the atmosphere and the smaller amount leaving it. So far, 91% of human-caused warming has been absorbed by oceans, sparing life on land an unlivable hell-scape. But the planet's energy imbalance has nearly doubled in the last 20 years, and scientists do not know how long oceans will continue to massively soak up this excess heat. Dire future climate impacts worse than what the world has already experienced are already baked in over the next decade or two. But beyond that, the future is in our hands, the scientists made clear. "We will rapidly reach a level of global warming of 1.5C, but what happens next depends on the choices which will be made," said co-author and former IPCC co-chair Valerie Masson-Delmotte. The Paris Agreement's 1.5C target allows for the possibility of ratcheting down global temperatures below that threshold before century's end. Ahead of a critical year-end climate summit in Brazil, international cooperation has been weakened by the US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement. US President Donald Trump's dismantling of domestic climate policies means the US is likely to fall short on its emissions reduction targets, and could sap the resolve of other countries to deepen their own pledges, experts say.

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