Current:Home > MyThe Paris Climate Problem: A Dangerous Lack of Urgency -Wealth Empowerment Academy
The Paris Climate Problem: A Dangerous Lack of Urgency
View
Date:2025-04-12 14:00:15
While nearly all of the world’s countries have pledged to cut their greenhouse gas emissions, the reductions they’re planning in the short term—over the next 10 years—aren’t nearly enough, leading scientists warn in a new report.
Nearly two-thirds of the pledges under the Paris climate agreement are “totally insufficient” to meet critical climate targets, the report by scientists who have been involved in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) found.
To keep global warming under 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7°F) compared to pre-industrial times, the IPCC has found that global greenhouse gas emissions need to fall by about half by 2030 and then reach net zero by mid-century. The longer countries stall, the steeper the necessary emissions cuts become.
“Time is running out if we are to achieve the Paris targets,” said Robert Watson, a co-author of the report and former chair of the IPCC.
“Without immediate action, we will almost certainly fail to meet the Paris targets,” he said. “The current pledges, even if fully implemented, are placing us on a pathway to a world 3 to 4 degrees Celsius warmer—a world that would have devastating impacts on food and water security, human health, displacement of people, and loss of biodiversity and degradation of ecosystem services, among other impacts.”
The report, published by the Universal Ecological Fund, assessed the initial commitments made by 184 countries that agreed to the Paris climate accord in 2015. (Under the agreement, countries are supposed to toughen their carbon pledges every five years.) It found that only 36 countries have made pledges that could conceivably reach the IPCC’s 2030 goal. The rest are not ambitious or urgent enough—and many are unlikely to be achieved, it says.
The U.S. Problem
The report comes as President Donald Trump formally began the process of withdrawing the United States from the agreement and reneging on the U.S. commitment. Even that commitment—cutting greenhouse gas emissions 26 to 28 percent compared to 2005 levels by 2025—was not nearly bold enough, the authors say.
The world’s top emitters—China, the U.S., the European Union and India—are responsible for more than half the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Among them, only the EU is on track to cut its emissions. China and India are expected to meet their Paris pledges, but emissions are projected to rise so substantially in both countries, that those goals are essentially going to be dwarfed.
Most of the countries’ pledges rely on international funding or technical help, but some of those “may not be implemented because little international support has been materialized,” the report’s authors say. The Trump administration announced in 2017 it would stop funding the United Nations Green Climate Fund, which is intended to help developing countries reduce emissions and adapt to climate change.
“The U.S. administration rejection of the Paris Agreement is a sad day indeed for the U.S.,” Watson said. “The U.S. cedes moral and technological leadership to other countries.
11,000 Scientists Speak Out
This week, more than 11,000 scientists released another report emphasizing the same concern: The world’s countries are not acting with enough urgency to forestall the climate crisis.
That report, published in the journal BioScience on the 40th anniversary of the first World Climate Conference, notes that climate researchers have been warning of the effects of climate change since the 1970s.
Yet, the authors say, “emissions are still rapidly rising, with increasingly damaging effects on the Earth’s climate. An immense increase of scale in endeavors to conserve our biosphere is needed to avoid untold suffering due to the climate crisis.”
The authors charted the changes over time of 15 ways human activities impact climate change, including subsidies for oil, air travel, population growth, and meat consumption. They also tracked 14 symptoms of these activities, including increasing greenhouse gas emissions and rising sea levels and temperatures.
The authors said their goal was to provide an easy-to-understand presentation of the climate crisis—both its causes and outcomes. They also offered to assist policymakers in creating “a just transition to a sustainable and equitable future.”
“The good news,” they write, “is that such transformative change, with social and economic justice for all, promises far greater human well-being than does business as usual.”
veryGood! (61)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Do you know these famous Aquarius signs? 30 A-listers (and their birthdays)
- Christian McCaffrey’s go-ahead TD rallies 49ers to 24-21 playoff win over Packers
- Islanders fire coach Lane Lambert, replace him with Patrick Roy
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Murder charge is dropped against a 15-year-old for a high school football game shooting
- 13 students reported killed in an elementary school dorm fire in China’s Henan province
- Readers' wishes for 2024: TLC for Earth, an end to AIDS, more empathy, less light
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Mexican family's death at border looms over ongoing Justice Department standoff with Texas
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Todd Helton on the cusp of the Baseball Hall of Fame with mile-high ceiling broken
- Lily Collins, Selena Gomez and More React to Ashley Park's Hospitalization
- Nikki Haley has spent 20 years navigating Republican Party factions. Trump may make that impossible
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Women and children are main victims of Gaza war, with 16,000 killed, UN says
- Missouri woman accused of poisoning husband with toxic plant charged with attempted murder
- What makes C.J. Stroud so uncommonly cool? How Texans QB sets himself apart with rare poise
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Inter Miami vs. El Salvador highlights: Lionel Messi plays a half in preseason debut
Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi is sworn into office following his disputed reelection
Hey Now, These Lizzie McGuire Secrets Are What Dreams Are Made Of
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Six-legged spaniel undergoes surgery to remove extra limbs and adjusts to life on four paws
Christian McCaffrey’s 2nd TD rallies the 49ers to 24-21 playoff win over Jordan Love and the Packers
Hostage families protest outside Netanyahu’s home, ramping up pressure for a truce-for-hostages deal