Dubai Telegraph - Lost in Trump's climate boast: best-case scenario abandoned

EUR -
AED 4.202411
AFN 73.235002
ALL 93.9451
AMD 420.678057
ANG 2.048741
AOA 1049.890918
ARS 1708.312595
AUD 1.651213
AWG 2.062583
AZN 1.949836
BAM 1.955698
BBD 2.30538
BDT 141.132639
BGN 1.934858
BHD 0.431577
BIF 3404.622415
BMD 1.14429
BND 1.477123
BOB 7.926587
BRL 5.916437
BSD 1.14464
BTN 109.047312
BWP 15.438195
BYN 3.321027
BYR 22428.090154
BZD 2.30208
CAD 1.624836
CDF 2570.076459
CHF 0.916594
CLF 0.026912
CLP 1059.174754
CNY 7.768706
CNH 7.764588
COP 3848.999237
CRC 521.4728
CUC 1.14429
CUP 30.323693
CVE 110.259249
CZK 24.19568
DJF 203.829368
DKK 7.478628
DOP 67.806463
DZD 152.60404
EGP 56.395058
ERN 17.164355
ETB 183.546226
FJD 2.586612
FKP 0.856953
GBP 0.854554
GEL 3.015251
GGP 0.856953
GHS 13.003322
GIP 0.856953
GMD 82.965454
GNF 10038.476394
GTQ 8.735544
GYD 239.427511
HKD 8.976557
HNL 30.636402
HRK 7.538017
HTG 149.712191
HUF 353.483164
IDR 20590.817625
ILS 3.431327
IMP 0.856953
INR 108.954179
IQD 1499.42179
IRR 1574486.25789
ISK 144.089478
JEP 0.856953
JMD 181.200549
JOD 0.811347
JPY 184.648452
KES 148.00228
KGS 100.065561
KHR 4583.760912
KMF 493.189526
KPW 1029.861683
KRW 1749.36247
KWD 0.355062
KYD 0.95395
KZT 541.301766
LAK 25845.651894
LBP 102500.253599
LKR 383.390002
LRD 207.749164
LSL 18.566032
LTL 3.378792
LVL 0.69217
LYD 7.336617
MAD 10.704142
MDL 20.13395
MGA 4852.746881
MKD 61.631785
MMK 2402.876165
MNT 4099.016956
MOP 9.246518
MRU 45.681617
MUR 53.839292
MVR 17.691161
MWK 1984.896468
MXN 19.989726
MYR 4.65845
MZN 73.132026
NAD 18.566032
NGN 1567.769704
NIO 42.117803
NOK 11.261005
NPR 174.475899
NZD 2.003836
OMR 0.441357
PAB 1.14464
PEN 3.894897
PGK 5.028738
PHP 70.375043
PKR 318.231701
PLN 4.293435
PYG 6959.636986
QAR 4.184282
RON 5.227162
RSD 117.370878
RUB 88.095405
RWF 1675.712595
SAR 4.297696
SBD 9.22131
SCR 15.409196
SDG 687.15054
SEK 11.051625
SGD 1.477741
SHP 0.854328
SLE 27.863894
SLL 23995.199932
SOS 654.165879
SRD 42.986453
STD 23684.499186
STN 24.498722
SVC 10.015478
SYP 126.480809
SZL 18.563032
THB 38.133518
TJS 10.610547
TMT 4.016459
TND 3.378224
TOP 2.755177
TRY 53.515602
TTD 7.757595
TWD 36.546387
TZS 3005.843216
UAH 50.978341
UGX 4177.782087
USD 1.14429
UYU 46.037599
UZS 13712.284769
VES 731.090824
VND 30090.258096
VUV 136.092267
WST 3.173323
XAF 655.922787
XAG 0.018332
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.092502
XCG 2.062892
XDR 0.815757
XOF 655.922787
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.254434
ZAR 18.573553
ZMK 10299.990075
ZMW 21.031903
ZWL 368.461014
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

Lost in Trump's climate boast: best-case scenario abandoned
Lost in Trump's climate boast: best-case scenario abandoned / Photo: ANTHONY WALLACE - AFP/File

Lost in Trump's climate boast: best-case scenario abandoned

As US President Donald Trump gloated over climate experts downgrading their worst-case emissions scenario, a key point was overshadowed: the most optimistic outcome has also been abandoned.

Text size:

An international committee of climate experts published a paper last month that will overhaul the scenarios that have been used by researchers and included in the UN's major climate reports for years.

The little-publicised paper gained renewed attention when Trump, who has called global warming a hoax, seized on it on Saturday to claim that the worst-case projections from climate experts had been "wrong".

Detlef Van Vuuren, the paper's lead author and senior researcher at PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, told AFP that Trump's social media post was a "completely incorrect interpretation" of the conclusions.

- Worst case scenario -

Experts previously established six scenarios more than 15 years ago.

The most extreme outcome -- sometimes called the "business-as-usual" scenario -- depicts a future in which humans continue the unabated burning of oil, gas and coal, which are responsible for most planet-heating emissions.

Previously known by the technical term RCP8.5, the worst-case outcome was replaced by SSP5-8.5 in the latest report of the UN's climate science body -- the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The IPCC's latest report, finalised in 2023, estimates global temperatures rising by between 3.3C and 5.7C by 2100 compared to pre-industrial levels, with a "best estimate" of 4.4C.

The most optimistic scenario sees warming kept close to 1.5C, with a brief "overshoot" slightly above that level, in a world where emissions are cut aggressively.

- New scenarios -

Last month's paper said the high emissions levels foreseen in the worst-case scenario "have become implausible" thanks to renewable energy, climate policies and recent emission trends.

Under their updated worst-case projection, temperatures could rise by almost 3.5C in 2100 over a preindustrial period defined as 1850-1900.

Replacing the old worst-case scenario "doesn't mean at all that we have made a lot of progress with respect to climate change", Van Vuuren said.

"The new high emissions would still lead to enormous climate damage," he added.

But the paper also rethinks the lowest emissions scenario, saying the "trajectories have become inconsistent with observed trends during the 2020–2030 period".

The new best-case scenario sees temperatures "overshooting" to at least 1.7C or even 1.8C before returning to 1.5C, Van Vuuren said.

"We don't find it plausible anymore to stay at 1.5 with only limited overshoot," Van Vuuren said. "Because emissions have increased so much. That scenario is not relevant anymore."

"I think the big change now is that they've pretty much completely abandoned the idea of non-overshoot scenarios," US climate expert Zeke Hausfather told AFP.

The old most optimistic scenario "assumed that we had started reducing emissions in 2020 and cut them rapidly by this point. And obviously, that didn't happen", Hausfather said.

IPCC chief Jim Skea said in October that breaching 1.5C was "almost inevitable", at least temporarily.

- 'WRONG!' -

But Trump focused on the rethink of the worst-case scenario.

"GOOD RIDDANCE!" he wrote on his Truth Social platform, taking a dig at Democrats with a deliberate typo.

"After 15 years of Dumocrats promising that 'Climate Change' is going to destroy the Planet, the United Nations TOP Climate Committee just admitted that its own projections (RCP8.5) were WRONG! WRONG! WRONG!""

French climate expert Christophe Cassou, who is among hundreds drafting the next IPCC report, said scientists "haven't been alarmist at all".

The world is not heading towards the worst-case scenario "because we've actually taken political measures allowing us to move away from that", he told AFP.

Cassou noted that both the old scenarios will appear in the next IPCC report, along with the new ones, as they were still cited in research.

Van Vuuren said the old scenario was "absolutely a legitimate choice".

"RCP8.5 has always been this low probability, high-risk scenario," he said, stressing that it is important for governments to explore "what could happen if things go wrong".

"Yes, there is some good news in the fact that we didn't follow the worst possible case," he said. "But that doesn't mean at all that climate change doesn't exist. It doesn't mean that people have overexaggerated climate change."

G.Koya--DT