[Vision2020] Global warming approaching critical point
Tbertruss at aol.com
Tbertruss at aol.com
Mon Jan 24 11:31:21 PST 2005
Report: Global warming approaching critical point
'An ecological time-bomb is ticking away'
Monday, January 24, 2005 Posted: 12:30 PM EST (1730 GMT)
var clickExpire = "02/23/2005"; An NOAA image of global surface temperatures.
LONDON, England (AP) -- Global warming is approaching the critical point of
no return, after which widespread drought, crop failure and rising sea-levels
would be irreversible, an international climate change task force warned
Monday.
The report, "Meeting the Climate Challenge," called on the G-8 leading
industrial nations to cut carbon emissions, double their research spending on green
technology and work with India and China to build on the Kyoto Protocol.
"An ecological time-bomb is ticking away," said Stephen Byers, who co-chaired
the task force with U.S. Republican Senator Olympia Snowe, and is a close
confidant of British Prime Minister Tony Blair. "World leaders need to recognize
that climate change is the single most important long term issue that the
planet faces."
The independent report, by the Institute for Public Policy Research in
Britain, the Center for American Progress in the United States and The Australia
Institute, is timed to coincide with Blair's commitment to advance international
climate change policy during Britain's G-8 presidency.
Byers said it was vital Blair secured U.S. cooperation in tackling climate
change. U.S. President George W. Bush has rejected the Kyoto accord, arguing
that the carbon emission cuts it demands would damage the U.S. economy.
"What we have got to do then is get the Americans as part of the G-8 to
engage in international concerted effort to tackle global warming," said Byers. "If
they refuse to do that then other countries will be reluctant to take any
steps."
According to the report, urgent action is needed to stop the global average
temperature rising by 2 degrees Celsius above the level in 1750 -- the
approximate start of the Industrial Revolution when mankind first started
significantly polluting the atmosphere with carbon dioxide.
Beyond a 2 degrees rise, "the risks to human societies and ecosystems grow
significantly" the report said, adding there would be a risk of "abrupt,
accelerated, or runaway climate change."
It warned of "climatic tipping points" such as the Greenland and West
Antarctic ice sheets melting and the Gulf Stream shutting down.
No accurate temperature readings were available for 1750, the report said,
but since 1860, global average temperature had risen by 0.8 percent to 15
degrees Celsius.
The two degrees rise could be avoided by keeping the concentration of carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere below 400 parts per million (ppm). Current
concentrations of 379 ppm "are likely to rise above 400 ppm in coming decades and could
rise far higher under a business-as-usual scenario," the report warned.
The task force urges all G-8 countries to agree to generate a quarter of
their electricity from renewable sources by 2025 and to shift agricultural
subsidies from food crops to biofuels.
The report recommends wider international use of emission trading schemes
which are already in use in the European Union, under which unused carbon dioxide
quotas are sold. The profit motive is expected to drive investment in new
technology to cut emissions further.
The task force of senior politicians, scientists and business figures was
established in March 2004. Its chief scientific adviser is Dr. Rajendra K.
Pachauri, chairman of the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The British government welcomed the report, which mirrors many of the
suggestions already floated by Blair in the build up to Britain's G-8 presidency.
Blair has acknowledged the importance of U.S. cooperation, but conceded
Washington is unlikely to sign up to Kyoto. Instead he is pursuing international
commitment to developing new environmentally friendly technology.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/science/01/24/climate.change.ap/index.html
---------------------------
V2020 Post by Ted Moffett
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/attachments/20050124/3d785c38/attachment.htm
More information about the Vision2020
mailing list