Some cheery Sunday morning news.
 

 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/dec/02/world-verge-climate-catastophe
 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/dec/02/world-verge-climate-catastophe

 

 On Sunday morning hundreds of politicians, government officials and scientists 
will gather in the grandeur of the International Congress Centre in Katowice, 
Poland. It will be a familiar experience for many. For 24 years the annual UN 
climate conference has served up a reliable diet of rhetoric, backroom talks 
and dramatic last-minute deals aimed at halting global warming.
 But this year’s will be a grimmer affair – by far. As recent reports have made 
clear, the world may no longer be hovering at the edge of destruction but has 
probably staggered beyond a crucial point of no return. Climate catastrophe is 
now looking inevitable. We have simply left it too late to hold rising global 
temperatures to under 1.5C and so prevent a future of drowned coasts, ruined 
coral reefs, spreading deserts and melted glaciers.
 
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 One example was provided last week by a UN report 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/nov/27/world-triple-efforts-climate-change-un-global-warming
 that revealed attempts to ensure fossil fuel emissions peak by 2020 will fail. 
Indeed the target will not even be reached by 2030. Another, by the World 
Meteorological Organization 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/nov/22/climate-heating-greenhouse-gases-at-record-levels-says-un,
 said the past four years had been the warmest on record and warned that global 
temperatures could easily rise by 3-5C by 2100, well above that sought-after 
goal of 1.5C. The UK will not be exempt either. The Met Office said summer 
temperatures could now be 5.4C hotter by 2070 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/nov/26/uk-flooding-threat-people-moved-michael-gove-climate-change.
 At the same time, prospects of reaching global deals to halt emissions have 
been weakened by the spread of rightwing populism. Not much to smile about in 
Katowice.
 Nor will the planet’s woes end in 2100. Although most discussions use the year 
as a convenient cut-off point for describing Earth’s likely fate, the changes 
we have already triggered will last well beyond that date, said Svetlana 
Jevrejeva, at the National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool. She has studied 
sea-level rises that will be triggered by melting ice sheets and expanding warm 
seawater in a world 3-5C hotter than it was in pre-industrial times, and 
concludes these could reach 0.74 to 1.8 metres by 2100. This would be enough to 
deluge Pacific and Indian Ocean island states and displace millions from Miami, 
Guangzhou, Mumbai and other low-lying cities. The total cost to the planet 
could top £11trillion.
 Even then the seas will not stop rising, Jevrejeva added. “They will continue 
to climb for centuries even after greenhouse-gas levels have been stabilised. 
We could experience the highest-ever global sea-level rise in the history of 
human civilisation.”
 Vast tracts of prime real estate will be destroyed – at a time when land will 
be needed with unprecedented desperation. Earth’s population stands at seven 
billion today and is predicted to rise to nine billion by 2050 and settle at 
over 11 billion by 2100 – when climate change will have wrecked major 
ecosystems and turned farmlands to dust bowls.
 
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  Residents of Anaroro, Madagascar, paddle through the flooded streets in the 
aftermath of a cyclone. Photograph: Gregoire Pourtier/AFP/Getty Unfortunately 
many experts believe Earth’s population will actually peak well beyond 11 
billion. “It could reach 15 billion,” said Sarah Harper, of Oxford’s Institute 
of Population Ageing. “All sorts of factors suggest women, particularly in 
sub-Saharan Africa, will still want to have relatively high numbers of children 
and this might keep the world’s population approaching 15 billion rather than 
12 billion.”
 

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