Is this the real news? “Humanity is torching the planet and paying the price,” said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres this week. This year will be the first year we have exceeded the Paris Agreement threshold of 1.5C.
2024 set to be the warmest year on record
Is this the real news? "Humanity is torching the planet and paying the price," said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres this week. This year will be the first year we have exceeded the Paris Agreement threshold of 1.5C.
When the first snowflakes fell on Japan's iconic Mount Fuji on Wednesday, locals and observers across the world breathed a sigh of relief. Its peak had been bare for a month longer than expected, the longest since records began 130 years ago, as the country shook off one of its hottest ever summers.
This year, for the second year in a row, Earth will be the hottest it has ever been, according to the European climate agency Copernicus. The globe reached more than 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming compared to pre-industrial levels this year, the threshold set by the Paris Agreement to avoid the very worst impacts of climate change.
The scientists and researchers at Copernicus concluded that human-caused climate change is the main source of the spike in global temperatures.
The news comes as Republican candidate and former president Donald Trump is re-elected for another four-year term in the US. Trump has called climate change a "hoax" and a "scam", promised to boost oil production above current record levels, and is expected to withdraw the US once again from the 2015 Paris climate agreement.
A study by Carbon Brief found that the drilling and oil and gas burning promised by Trump would add four billion tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere by 2030.1
According to scientists, to avoid the most devastating impacts of warming, from famine and drought to displacement and deaths from extreme heat, the world's biggest economies must reduce greenhouse gas emissions from 2005 levels by 67% before 2035 - a target the US is already trailing behind under the Biden administration, which has made climate intervention one of its headline policies.2
In a few days, delegations from countries across the world will travel to Baku, Azerbaijan, for the United Nations climate summit COP29, which takes place every year. The decision to let Azerbaijan host COP29 has been controversial: fossil fuel accounts for two-thirds of the country's income and 90% of its exports.
Extreme weather has been a hallmark featureA distinguishing characteristic of someone or something. of this year. From Hurricane Milton in Florida, which caused £65bn of destruction, to recent flash flooding in Spain, which killed 200 people, the devastating effects of climate change are making themselves felt across the globe.
Is this the real news?
Yes: It seems we have surpassed the target we set to avoid the most dystopianRelating to an imagined society where there is great suffering or injustice. effects of climate change, and the biggest economy in the world has just elected a climate denier who intends to exceed our record levels of oil production.
No: Even though the 1.5C limit has been broken for the first time, we have not yet broken the Paris goal, as this refers to an average over 20 years. It is not over yet, and we will still have plenty of opportunities to make things right, as long as the rest of the world steps up in the absence of US action.
Or... Although this is a big story, there are so many big stories and threats that it hardly holds up. What about AI, which could drive us to extinction within a decade? What about pandemics? What about nuclear war, which could be started by Russia at any moment?
Keywords
Hallmark Feature - A distinguishing characteristic of someone or something.
Dystopian - Relating to an imagined society where there is great suffering or injustice.
2024 set to be the warmest year on record
Glossary
Hallmark Feature - A distinguishing characteristic of someone or something.
Dystopian - Relating to an imagined society where there is great suffering or injustice.