Scientist:
Climate talks aim too low for target
The
cuts in greenhouse gases offered at the 192-nation climate
conference are "clearly not enough" to assure
the world it will head off dangerous global warming, a key
UN-affiliated scientist said Saturday.
13/12/2009
- Such projections, moreover, don't even account for the
"potentially hugely important" threat of methane
from the Arctic's thawing permafrost, other researchers
said.
Midway
through the two-week UN conference, richer nations are offering
firm reductions in emissions of carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases ranging from 3-4 percent for the US to
20 percent for the European Union, in terms of 2020 emission
levels compared with 1990.
One
authoritative independent analysis finds the aggregate cuts
amount to 8-12 percent. But the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Changes (IPCC), the UN-sponsored science network,
recommends that reductions average in the 25-40-percent
range to keep global temperature increases below 2 degrees
C (3.6 F) above preindustrial levels and head off the worst
of global warming.
"I
think it is clearly not enough," the IPCC's Thomas
Stocker said of the numbers discussed here. "We are
by far short of having security that the 2-degree target
will be met."
The
Swiss physicist heads the IPCC's Working Group I, the climate
science group that, among other things, assesses the impact
that emissions — from fossil-fuel burning, deforestation
and other sources — have on concentrations of global-warming
gases in the atmosphere and then on temperatures.
Stocker
told reporters the IPCC-recommended target "may be
too much to ask at this stage" — too politically
daunting to achieve in the current annual conference. But
he suggested climate talks should aim at longer-term commitments,
over decades, not the short commitment periods envisioned
in the annual conferences.
Even
limiting the temperature rise to 2 degrees C would not forestall
serious damage, the IPCC chairman, Rajendra Pachauri, told
reporters. "We would get sea-level rise, through thermal
expansion alone, of 0.4 to 1.4 meters" (1.3 feet to
4.5 feet), he said.
Climate
science co-chair Stocker acknowledged that IPCC projections
do not include the potential "tipping point" addition
of trapped methane, a powerful greenhouse gas that would
be released as permafrost thaws in the far north.
Do UNFCCC