Climate crisis: countries must deliver on agreements they have signed, breach of Paris Agreement limits inevitable, Johan Rockstrom says

The world is just beginning to see the worst impacts of climate change, and world leaders must put aside their distrust and geopolitical tensions to move “as fast as we can” to deliver on their decarbonisation commitments and prevent irreversible damage to the planet, one of the world’s top climate scientists said.

“It’s time to buckle up, because we are heading towards a few jumpy decades,” Johan Rockstrom, director of Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, told the Post.

“If we phase out fossil fuels by 2050 and stop destroying nature, it will still get worse before it gets better. Because we are already in the pipeline of global warming … it’s inevitable today that we will crash through 1.5 degrees Celsius, probably within 10 to 15 years.”

There is increasing risk that the world will exceed the Paris Agreement goal of limiting average global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, at least temporarily, according to the latest mathematical models and reports from the United Nations and other organisations. The world is currently on track for an expected warming of 2.7 degrees Celsius by 2100, these studies have found.

A study released last year by the Stockholm Resilience Centre, founded by Rockstrom, said humans had crossed six of nine “planetary boundaries”, a concept introduced in 2009 to define global environmental limits, such as climate, water and wildlife diversity, within which humans can safely live.

“The situation is very serious … it means we’re not only in the depths of a climate crisis, we’re also deep into a biosphere crisis,” Rockstrom said. “So to put it simply, we are hitting the planet very hard with emissions of greenhouse gases, and the burning of fossil fuels not only leads to a climate crisis but also weakens the planet’s ability to cope with that stress.”

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Crossing such boundaries could lead to short-term challenges such as the rising frequency of water scarcity, heatwaves, genetic disease patterns, sea level rise and food crises. It can also trigger irreversible changes in how the planet functions and lead to potentially long-term catastrophic outcomes and make the planet uninhabitable, Rockstrom said.

“The window is still open for us to be able to come back into a manageable future for humanity, within the safe operating space, but it will take urgent action at the global level,” he said. “And we need to be very, very fast. The answer is simple: deliver the agreements that have already been signed onto.”

To keep global warming within limits, the Paris Agreement called for global emissions to be reduced by 45 per cent by 2030 and for them to reach net zero by 2050. Major economies around the world also set up their national carbon-neutral targets and timelines to phase out fossil fuels and transition to clean energy. The United States has a goal of achieving net zero by 2050, and China aims to meet that goal a decade later.

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Distrust and geopolitical conflicts will only hinder efforts towards a green transition, Rockstrom said.

“There’s never been a time in my professional life where I have been more pessimistic than today,” he said. “The reason is not only that the science is showing that we’re coming so close to unmanageable risks … it’s also that it’s an all-time low in terms of trust, and there is geopolitical instability and turbulence.”

Countries need to prioritise the climate in their national strategies and raise their decarbonisation ambitions significantly. “All countries in Asia, like countries in Europe and North America, need to align their plans with the latest science, which means cutting emissions by half by 2030,” Rockstrom said.

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“And continuing that plan, until you reach zero by 2050.”

Asia, given its rapidly growing economies, has a particular opportunity as far as innovation in green technologies is concerned and could show the way for a global economy of the future, he added.

There is an urgent need in the Asia-Pacific region to improve resilience in urban infrastructure and focus on research and development of green technologies, such as sustainable cooling, as the region is densely urbanised and many countries face the risk of heatwaves as they are close to a tropical climate, Rockstrom said.

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