Perilous Times and Climate Change
Next climate warming report will be dramatically worse: UN
by Staff Writers
United Nations (AFP) Nov 22, 2010
United Nations leaders will demand "concrete results" from the looming
Cancun climate summit as global warming is accelerating, a top UN
organizer of the event said Monday.
Robert Orr, UN under secretary general for planning, said the next
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report on global warming will
be much worse than the last one.
Representatives from 194 countries are to meet in the Mexican resort
city of Cancun from November 29 to December 10 for a new attempt to
strike a deal to curb greenhouse gases after 2012.
Orr told reporters that negotiators heading for the Cancun conference
"need to remind themselves, the longer we delay, the more we will pay
both in terms of lives and in terms of money."
He said UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon would make it clear to world
leaders in Cancun "that we should not take any comfort in the climate
deniers' siren call."
"The evidence shows us quite the opposite-- that we can't rest easy at
all" as scientists agree that climate change "is happening in an
accelerated way."
"As preparations are underway for the next IPCC report, just about
everything that you will see in the next report will be more dramatic
than the last report, because that is where all the data is pointing."
The fourth IPCC assessment released in 2007 said that global warming is
"unequivocal" and mainly caused by human activity.
Its next report, involving contributions from thousands of scientists
around the world, is due in 2014.
With many countries fearful of a repeat of last year's bitter
Copenhagen summit failure, Orr said that progress is possible in Cancun.
If governments "understand the peril that their populations are in, it
is much easier to get over the political hurdles to do what you have to
do," he said.
The United Nations wants breakthroughs on verifying deforestation and
financing to combat the lost of tropical forests.
Efforts to speed up technology transfers to combat global warming and
financing projects to slow the phenomenon could also be advanced, Orr
said.
Thirty billion dollars of emergency funding over three years was agreed
at Copenhagen and a UN panel on how to raise 100 billion dollars a year
from 2020 has already delivered its report.
The panel recommended taxes on carbon emissions and international
transport, including air tickets.
Orr said no one should expect "the final deal" in Cancun.
But he said: "The time has come for some decisions on issues and
therefore we do want some concrete results."