Dubai Telegraph - Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory

EUR -
AED 4.184248
AFN 71.77911
ALL 94.261454
AMD 418.562052
ANG 2.03989
AOA 1044.781386
ARS 1684.05352
AUD 1.652425
AWG 2.052248
AZN 1.937198
BAM 1.955623
BBD 2.296792
BDT 140.267283
BGN 1.926499
BHD 0.429961
BIF 3386.892936
BMD 1.139347
BND 1.475566
BOB 7.880286
BRL 5.898376
BSD 1.140397
BTN 107.037296
BWP 15.497595
BYN 3.3074
BYR 22331.195401
BZD 2.293492
CAD 1.616676
CDF 2583.465669
CHF 0.922369
CLF 0.026742
CLP 1051.04471
CNY 7.74545
CNH 7.752895
COP 3917.444835
CRC 517.753059
CUC 1.139347
CUP 30.192688
CVE 110.255004
CZK 24.278354
DJF 203.071589
DKK 7.48072
DOP 67.003925
DZD 152.017218
EGP 56.431884
ERN 17.090201
ETB 183.851832
FJD 2.581872
FKP 0.863259
GBP 0.863076
GEL 3.013605
GGP 0.863259
GHS 12.857834
GIP 0.863259
GMD 83.171886
GNF 9992.094093
GTQ 8.700211
GYD 238.658363
HKD 8.935383
HNL 30.512234
HRK 7.539969
HTG 149.046487
HUF 354.166203
IDR 20349.415744
ILS 3.420376
IMP 0.863259
INR 107.509326
IQD 1493.864563
IRR 1566886.555036
ISK 144.11575
JEP 0.863259
JMD 179.603717
JOD 0.807776
JPY 184.294988
KES 147.566621
KGS 99.635519
KHR 4577.584985
KMF 494.476186
KPW 1025.412432
KRW 1749.227818
KWD 0.352753
KYD 0.950314
KZT 553.309836
LAK 25030.730655
LBP 102120.241537
LKR 383.325247
LRD 207.721168
LSL 18.745301
LTL 3.364194
LVL 0.689179
LYD 7.320336
MAD 10.693331
MDL 20.219167
MGA 4823.562684
MKD 61.629413
MMK 2391.785903
MNT 4078.444062
MOP 9.211865
MRU 45.511874
MUR 53.834656
MVR 17.602668
MWK 1977.420722
MXN 19.94335
MYR 4.65765
MZN 72.805172
NAD 18.745301
NGN 1567.889271
NIO 41.966195
NOK 11.317164
NPR 171.259473
NZD 2.017972
OMR 0.438074
PAB 1.140397
PEN 3.888647
PGK 5.004546
PHP 69.85561
PKR 317.365427
PLN 4.291862
PYG 6960.368956
QAR 4.156823
RON 5.244531
RSD 117.369359
RUB 89.906949
RWF 1670.048589
SAR 4.282512
SBD 9.173966
SCR 16.016748
SDG 683.608035
SEK 11.094514
SGD 1.474547
SHP 0.850637
SLE 28.261084
SLL 23891.534887
SOS 651.740912
SRD 42.706145
STD 23582.176444
STN 24.497779
SVC 9.978095
SYP 125.934381
SZL 18.734302
THB 38.029138
TJS 10.554143
TMT 3.987713
TND 3.379994
TOP 2.743274
TRY 53.040347
TTD 7.750297
TWD 36.299356
TZS 2999.128092
UAH 51.187059
UGX 4185.620522
USD 1.139347
UYU 45.77585
UZS 13697.758129
VES 707.252868
VND 29964.818319
VUV 135.82087
WST 3.168388
XAF 655.897535
XAG 0.019435
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.079142
XCG 2.055214
XDR 0.815726
XOF 655.897535
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.876578
ZAR 19.354988
ZMK 10255.484316
ZMW 20.542138
ZWL 366.869174
  • CMSC

    -0.1160

    21.93

    -0.53%

  • BCC

    1.2600

    81.02

    +1.56%

  • CMSD

    -0.1600

    21.77

    -0.73%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    83.01

    -0.49%

  • BCE

    -0.2800

    22.92

    -1.22%

  • GSK

    0.6100

    52.5

    +1.16%

  • RBGPF

    3.7000

    65

    +5.69%

  • RIO

    -1.3700

    93.74

    -1.46%

  • BP

    -0.5900

    37.13

    -1.59%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.79

    +1.64%

  • BTI

    0.2800

    62.76

    +0.45%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.89

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.3900

    18.39

    +2.12%

  • RELX

    0.4200

    31.34

    +1.34%

  • AZN

    2.7300

    188.41

    +1.45%

Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory
Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory / Photo: Ricardo Makyn - AFP

Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory

The spectre of humanity's failure to curb heat-trapping emissions hangs over climate negotiations in Brazil, after the UN confirmed the planet is now certain to "overshoot" 1.5C of warming and faces a tough battle to bring temperatures back down.

Text size:

Global tensions, economic uncertainty and a US administration under Donald Trump that is hostile to climate science have snatched political focus away from tackling the fossil fuel pollution and environmental destruction driving warming.

With tepid climate ambition and emissions still rising, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recently acknowledged that crossing 1.5C in the coming years was now inevitable.

But he insisted the world must not give up on the Paris Agreement's safer goal.

"The path to a livable future gets steeper by the day. But this is no reason to surrender," he said this week as countries prepared to meet for the COP30 summit in the Amazon city of Belem.

Scientists say every tenth of a degree over 1.5C magnifies dangerous and costly impacts -- such as drought, heat, fire and floods -- while increasing the risks of passing large-scale tipping points.

Climate scientist Johan Rockstrom, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said humanity now faces perhaps 50 to 70 years above 1.5C before possibly dragging temperatures back down.

"It means with essentially a hundred percent certainty that we will have a very rough time before it potentially gets better," he told AFP.

- 'Declare failure' -

The 2015 Paris climate deal aimed to limit global warming to "well below" 2C from pre-industrial (1850-1900) levels -- and 1.5C if possible.

While overshoot -- temperature trajectories that go beyond 1.5C before coming back down -- is not a new concept in science, many leading climate figures have been uneasy talking about it.

"I didn't want to give the impression that it's okay if we overshoot," Patricia Espinosa, the former head of UN Climate Change, told AFP earlier this year.

"I wanted to keep very, very firm."

To minimise or avoid overshoot, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said emissions needed to peak around 2020 and be essentially halved by 2030.

At the midway point of the decade, emissions continue to rise and so do temperatures, with 2024 the first full year above 1.5C.

So the message is shifting.

"The first thing we need to honestly communicate to humanity, but also to all political leaders in the world gathering in Belem, is that we have to declare failure," said Rockstrom, who was among the scientists consulted by Guterres ahead of COP30 in Brazil.

But this only adds to the urgency for action, he said, with higher warming raising risks for food systems, fresh water and global security.

"There's no evidence that we can adapt to anything beyond two degrees Celsius," Rockstrom said. Beyond 3C would mean "disaster mode" for billions, he added.

The IPCC has warned that crossing 1.5C threatens the widespread melting of mountain glaciers and ice sheets containing enough frozen water to ultimately lift the ocean by metres.

Tropical coral reefs, the nursery for a significant share of marine life and crucial to the livelihoods of some 200 million people, are likely already reaching a tipping point, according to recent research.

But there are still many unknowns, including how long these systems might be able to endure with overshoot.

- Negative emissions -

To turn the situation around, Guterres said the world needed to peak emissions "immediately", speed up the transition to renewable energy, and protect forests and oceans, which play a crucial role in absorbing carbon from the atmosphere.

After reaching net zero by 2050, the world will also need to swiftly deploy strategies to remove carbon from the atmosphere.

Research by Climate Analytics suggests that the huge rollout of cheap green technologies like solar and wind mean fossil fuels could be phased out sooner than expected, with warming ultimately brought back to 1.2C by 2100.

But they said the most ambitious global climate action likely means an overshoot of at least 1.7C for decades.

Lowering temperatures will require the use of controversial technologies -- to capture carbon emissions at source or permanently remove CO2 from the air -- which are not yet operational at scale.

It also relies on forests and the ocean to continue absorbing half of all CO2 pollution.

But that may already be changing.

In October the World Meteorological Organization reported a record jump in the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere and voiced "significant concern" that the land and oceans were becoming less able to soak up carbon dioxide.

"The whole picture points towards an increasing difficulty with relying on the Earth system to take up the carbon," said Bill Hare of Climate Analytics.

"We're now in a very risky space."

O.Mehta--DT