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9:19 PM (14 minutes ago)
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9:19 PM (14 minutes ago)
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st Books Economics Climate Paid Leave
Climate Change
May 27, 2015
Limiting Global Warming to 2 Degrees Celsius Won’t Save Us
By Kate Dooley and and Peter Christoff Photo: Joe Raedle / Getty Images
The goal of international climate negotiations is “to avoid dangerous atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases.” In 2010, Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change formally recognized the “long term goal” of the convention was to hold the increase in global average warming to below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
Is 2 degrees Celsius therefore the safe limit above which climate change becomes “dangerous”? A UN expert dialogue of more than 70 scientists, experts, and climate negotiators recently released a final report concluding that 2 degrees Celsius is “inadequate” as a safe limit.
The report will feed into a review of the 2 degrees Celsius limit, including discussions on a tougher 1.5 degrees Celsius warming limit in the new climate agreement expected in Paris in December.
So, what does the evidence say?
What’s the difference between 1.5 and 2 degrees Celsius?
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It is well known that the risks of climate change can be significantly reduced if warming is limited to well below 2 degrees Celsius.
However, the scientific literature related to 1.5 degrees Celsius is scarce, as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) compares differences along 2 degrees Celsius and 4 degrees Celsius pathways—somewhat at odds with the current policy debates over temperature limits and danger thresholds.
Global average warming is just that—an average. Regional warming and vulnerability to climate impacts will vary significantly. Therefore the difference in projected risks between 1.5 degrees Celsius and 2 degrees Celsius of warming is particularly important for highly temperature-sensitive systems, such as the polar regions, high mountains and the tropics, and low-lying coastal regions.
At 2 degrees Celsius the very existence of some atoll nations is threatened by rising sea-levels. Limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius may restrict sea level rise below one meter.
Yet even at 1.5 degrees Celsius warming, regional food security risks are significant. Africa is particularly vulnerable, with significant reduction in staple crop yields in some countries. Current levels of warming are already causing impacts that many people will not be able to adapt to—more scope for adaptation would exist at 1.5 degrees Celsius, especially in the agricultural sector.
Can we limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius?
The 2 degrees Celsius warming limit or “guardrail” has long been controversial. It was rejected by many developing countries at Copenhagen and over two thirds of Parties to the Convention call for a 1.5 degrees Celsius limit. So is this ambitious temperature limit still within reach?
The carbon budget approach—adopted by the IPCC in its latest report—defines the amounts of cumulative CO2 emissions which will drive warming to a given global temperature limit. The most stringent IPCC scenario gives a remaining (from 2011) carbon budget of 1,000 billion tonnes of CO2, for a “likely” chance of keeping global temperature within 2 degrees Celsius.
Yet whether a lower temperature limit is still within reach, and the pathway to get there, is debated. The more ambitious mitigation scenarios reported by the IPCC are characterized by overshooting the budget and then removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. This usually means relying on bioenergy plus carbon capture and storage (burning biomass for energy, removing the CO2, and then storing it underground) to remove carbon from the atmosphere—which comes with its own risks.
1.5 degrees Celsius pathways which do not rely on negative emissions depend on a much lower remaining budget. Even a 50 percent chance of keeping below 1.5 degrees Celsius requires immediate and radical emission reductions. This would mean unprecedented annual rates of decline which are not in line with current levels of energy consumption or ideas of economic growth.
Others suggest that, for fossil fuel emissions and for developed economies, there is already no carbon budget left at all.
Moreover, this discussion doesn’t account for aerosol and particulate pollution masking the impact of greenhouse emissions, which could mean an additional 0.8 degrees Celsius of warming is already “locked in,” increasing the scale of the challenge.
The UNFCC expert group recognized that limiting global warming to below even 2 degrees Celsius necessitates a radical transition, not merely a fine-tuning of current trends, yet such radical emissions reduction pathways are so far excluded from IPCC assessment, leaving policy makers with little evidence on the impacts and feasibility of lower targets.
Where to from here?
The group concluded that the world is not on track to achieve the long-term global goal of 2 degrees Celsius, noting that the longer we wait to bend the curve of global greenhouse gas emissions, the steeper we will have to bend it down later.
The report will feed into discussions in relation to a decision on the global goal, expected at the Paris congress, with the report noting that limiting global warming to below 1.5 degrees Celsius would come with several advantages in terms of coming closer to a safer “guardrail.”
However, the expert group falls short of recommending a 1.5 degrees Celsius goal, arguing that the science on a 1.5 degrees Celsius warming limit is less robust, despite presenting evidence that, in some regions, very high risks are projected for warming above 1.5 degrees Celsius.
The idea that the 2 degrees Celsius threshold is not safe is not new. Ten years ago prominent climate scientist James Hansen said the 2 degrees Celsius threshold “cannot be considered a responsible target” and subsequently called for a 1 degrees Celsius limit, with a carbon budget of just 500 Gt.
Only a few weeks ago, Hansen told ABC breakfast radio that it was crazy to think of 2 degrees Celsius as a safe limit.
Others have joined the fray, challenging the acceptance of high probabilities of exceeding 2 degrees Celsius, and risky mitigation pathways to get there. Kevin Anderson of the Tyndall Centre in Britain has said that 2 degrees Celsius represents a threshold, not between acceptable and dangerous, but between “dangerous” and “extremely dangerous” climate change.
According to the IPCC’s budget numbers, only the very ambitious 1.5 degrees Celsius pathway also gives us a high probability of holding warming even below 2 degrees Celsius. After decades of procrastination, limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, or even increasing the probabilities of not exceeding 2 degrees Celsius, will now require action “faster than most policy makers conceive is possible.”
The Conversation
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
Kate Dooley is PhD candidate, Australian German Climate & Energy College at University of Melbourne. Peter Christoff is Associate Professor at University of Melbourne.
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5:07 PM (29 minutes ago)
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A Prehistory of Violence – monbiot.com |
| A Prehistory of Violence
Posted: 27 May 2015 06:29 AM PDT It now looks as if the greatest mass extinction on Earth – 250 million years ago – was caused by fossil fuel burning. By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 27th May 2015 Do you want to know the real reason for the advances by Isis in Iraq and Syria? Changing lightbulbs in America. This is the explanation given by John McCain, Republican chair of the Senate armed services committee. At the weekend he blamed Barack Obama’s inability to magic away Islamic State on the president’s belief that climate change is “the biggest enemy we have”. Never mind the role of the Iraq war – which Mr McCain supported – in destabilising the region, destroying the Iraqi army and creating the opportunities Isis has exploited. Never mind the propagation of Salafi doctrines by Saudi Arabia, which McCain bravely confronts by grovelling before its tyrants. It’s the Better Buildings Challenge and the Solar Instructor Training Network that allowed Isis to capture Ramadi and Palmyra. In fact there is a connection, but it strengthens Obama’s contention that “climate change constitutes a serious threat to global security”. One of the likely catalysts for the 2011 uprising in Syria was a massive drought – the worst in the region in the instrumental record – that lasted from 2006 to 2010. It caused the emigration of one and a half million rural workers into Syrian cities, and generated furious resentment when Bashar al-Assad’s government failed to respond effectively. Climate models suggest that man-made global warming more than doubled the likelihood of a drought of this magnitude. But this is nothing by comparison to the real threats to global security; in fact, to threats that make global security, as understood by McCain and Obama, look almost frivolous. As the evidence accumulates, it now seems that climate change was the commonest cause of mass extinction in the Earth’s prehistory. In the media, if not the scientific literature, global catastrophes have long been associated with asteroid strikes. But as the dating of rocks has improved, the links have vanished. Even the famous meteorite impact at Chicxulub in Mexico, widely blamed for the destruction of the dinosaurs, was out of synch by over 100,000 years. The story that emerges repeatedly from the fossil record is mass extinction caused by three deadly impacts, occurring simultaneously: global warming, the acidification of the oceans and the loss of oxygen from seawater. All these effects are caused by large amounts of carbon dioxide entering the atmosphere. When seawater absorbs CO2, its acidity increases. As temperatures rise, circulation in the oceans stalls, preventing oxygen from reaching the depths. The great outgassings of the past were caused by volcanic activity that was orders of magnitude greater than the eruptions we sometimes witness today. The dinosaurs appear to have been wiped out by the formation of the Deccan Traps in India: an outpouring of basalt on such a scale that one river of lava flowed for 1500km. But that event was dwarfed by a far greater one, 190 million years earlier, that wiped out 96% of marine life as well as most of the species on land. What was the cause? It now appears that it might have been the burning of fossil fuel. Before I explain this extraordinary contention, it’s worth taking a moment to consider what mass extinction means. This catastrophe, at the end of the Permian period 252 million years ago, wiped out not just species within the world’s ecosystems, but the ecosystems themselves. Forests and coral reefs vanished from the fossil record for some 10 million years. When, eventually, they were reconstituted, it was with a different collection of species, that evolved to fill the ecological vacuum. Much of the world’s surface was reduced to bare rubble. Were such an extinction to take place today, it would be likely to eliminate almost all the living systems that sustain us. When plants are stripped from the land, the soil soon follows. The latest research into the catastrophe at the end of the Permian is summarised in two articles by the geologist John Mason on the Skeptical Science site. The strongest clues all seem to point to the same conclusion: that the extinctions were triggered by the eruption of an igneous belt even bigger than the Deccan plateau: the Siberian Traps. As well as CO2, the volcanoes there produced sulphur dioxide, chlorides and fluorides, causing acid rain and the depletion of ozone. But because the residence time of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is greater than that of these other gases, it’s likely to have been the major cause of extinction. The change of state – including a rise in oceanic temperatures of between six and ten degrees – was too sudden and sustained to permit the majority of lifeforms to adapt. The onset of mass extinction coincides with a giant carbon spike “so distinctive that it serves as a marker-horizon all over the world”. So where did the carbon dioxide come from? Some of it would have bubbled out of the magma. But, enormous as the eruptions were, this alone seems insufficient to account for either the total volume of emissions or the ratio of isotopes (the different atomic forms) of the carbon entering the atmosphere. Fossil fuel seems to fill the gap. The volcanoes exploded through the Tunguska sedimentary basin, cooking much of the coal, petroleum and methane it contained. Particles of coal fly ash have been found in rocks as far away as the Canadian Arctic. Rising temperatures might also have destabilised methane hydrates – a frozen form of natural gas – causing the kind of runaway feedback that terrifies some climate scientists today. Yes: the geological record suggests that fossil fuel burning might have eliminated most life on Earth. And today? According to a paper published in 2013, the current rate of ocean acidification, caused by the burning of fossil fuels, is faster than at any time in the past 300 million years. During the Permian mass extinction, the eruption of the Siberian Traps through the Tunguska basin seems to have produced between one and two gigatonnes of carbon dioxide a year. Today fossil fuel burning produces 30 gigatonnes a year. Isis? Global security? If anyone were to survive a mass extinction on the scale of the Permian catastrophe, they would look back and shake their heads, amazed that we could have considered such issues more important. |
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10:10 AM (2 hours ago)
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2:25 PM (1 hour ago)
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Front page of the Australian Financial Review today: “Hockey, PM split over tampon tax.”1 That’s right, Minister for Women Tony Abbott just overruled his Treasurer on removing the tax on tampons, when other “essential health items”, like condoms and lubricant, are excluded from GST.2
You see, just weeks ago, a university student named Subeta launched a petition on GetUp’s grassroots petition platform CommunityRun to end the tampon tax, and nearly 100,000 people have joined her since. Thanks to her passion, hard work and strategic campaigning, Subeta got to confront Treasurer Joe Hockey live on the ABC programme Q&A Monday night.
In a brilliant moment of democracy in action, Treasurer Joe Hockey agreed that yes, the tampon tax should go… until Mr Abbott overruled him the next morning.3 So Subeta is heading to Parliament this week to organise an audacious stunt to confront the Prime Minister, and this is our chance to back her up.
In 2015, no politician under sustained pressure can maintain the case that tampons and sanitary pads are not “essential” items (Mr Hockey is proof). So, put simply, as long as menstruating Australians can’t avoid the tampon tax, then neither should Tony Abbott.
It all starts this week with Subeta and a massive 20 metre billboard truck parked on Parliament House lawn featuring two things: Tony Abbott and tampons. And it continues with more inventive, irreverent and sustained tampon-related tactics backed by our donations, until the tax is scrapped.
It’s amazing what one person can accomplish. Thanks to Subeta’s campaign, all the major media outlets are backing this story, from ABC to Sunrise, with Subeta herself doing interviews yesterday with Channel 7, ABC, and more. So here’s what we have planned to help Subeta — and her nearly 100,000 fellow campaigners — keep the pressure on:
We’re only limited by our imaginations and what we can raise together now. Click on the link to chip in:
http://www.getup.org.au/tampons-for-tony
Subeta saw something that she knew in her heart was wrong, and decided to do something about it. Nearly 100,000 signatures later, she had the Treasurer of the nation on board too. Now Mr Abbott is trying to hide from his responsibilities to ensure fair and equal treatment of half the population by saying the tampon tax is “a matter for the states”.4
But the truth is, GST changes almost always begin with the Federal Government – just like the Abbott Government’s new ‘Netflix tax’ on digital products. And it wasn’t just “a matter for the states” in 2004 when Health Minister Tony Abbott excluded condoms and lubricant from the GST!5
So we can’t let Tony Abbott take this win away from Subeta and her supporters — and from all the people who have fought for this change over many years. It may be a small tax but it’s an incredibly symbolic one. And it speaks volumes that our Prime Minister would intervene in his Treasurer’s responsibilities, in order to support a tax that forces women to pay more for an essential health item. Sound fair? Hardly.
Thanks for all you do,
Emma, Sara & Nat, for the GetUp team
PS – Mr Abbott is trying to claim that Joe Hockey didn’t agree with Subeta on Q&A Monday night. But in case you missed it, here’s how it went down after Subeta asked her question (Note: Mr Hockey said he’d been asked about it before, which means he had time to formulate his answer):6
TONY JONES: So should the GST be taken off [sanitary products]? That’s the point.
JOE HOCKEY: Well, it probably should, yes. The answer is yes …
JOE HOCKEY (to Subeta): Well, good on you for getting the petition together and I will give you this undertaking: I will raise it with the States at the next meeting of the Treasurers in July.
SUBETA: Thank you, so much. That’d be great…
JOE HOCKEY: I was asked it in a pub the other day as well, in politics in the pub and a range of other places so, look, if you feel strongly about it, I’m fine about it.
Chip in to make sure Tony Abbott doesn’t get to rewrite history and take this win away from Subeta and all menstruating Australians.
References
[1] “Tampon tax break creates confusion for Coalition policy”, The Australian Financial Review, 26 May 2015
[2] “Abbott downplays tampon tax pledge”, SBS online, 26 May 2015
[3] “Abbott downplays tampon tax pledge”, SBS online, 26 May 2015
[4] “Tampon tax: Tony Abbott says removing GST on sanitary items ‘certainly not something Government plans to do’”, ABC news, 27 May 2015
[5] “GST-free Supply (Health Goods) Determination bill”, Minister for Health and Ageing Tony Abbott, 2004
[6] “Joe Hockey on the Tradies vs Ladies Budget”, Q&A on the ABC, 25 May 2015
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11:08 AM (2 hours ago)
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Friends,
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In 2015, the global divestment movement has been growing in leaps and bounds, and right now we have a chance to make history.
On June 5th, the largest national fund in the world — worth a whopping $867 billion — could divest from coal.
If Norway divested even the 1.3% that its Global Pension Fund has invested in coal, it would be the biggest divestment EVER. And there’s a real chance that they’ll do just that — especially if people around the world chime in to encourage them.
This week, we’re delivering tens of thousands of signatures from people like you to Norwegian Parliamentarians, who’ll make a recommendation to the larger parliament vote the following week.
With enough pressure from around the world, this could be the biggest amount of money ever divested from fossil fuels by a single institution. If enough of us make our voices heard ahead of their crucial deadline this week, it could send a strong signal that it’s time to end coal once and for all.
With great (financial) power, comes great (moral) responsibility:
Tell Norway’s political leaders to stand on the right side of history.
With your voice — and the voices of frontline communities who are fighting coal from India to Poland — we’ve got a good chance of being heard. And with coal divestment under its belt, Norway will be one huge step closer to full divestment from all fossil fuels.
Thank you for answering the global call,
Charlie for the 350.org team

350.org is building a global climate movement.You can connect with us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and become a sustaining donor to keep this movement strong and growing.