Small increases in global temperatures impacts Climate Change

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Mar 5, 2007, 9:37:55 PM3/5/07
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*Perilous Times and Global Warming

Small increases in global temperatures impacts** Climate Change*

Even small increases in global temperatures could have impacts including
a rise in sea level, more frequent heat waves, droughts, extreme weather
occurrences like torrential rains and floods (recent flooding in Jakarta
pictured here), increased tropical diseases in now-temperate regions,
and intensified hurricanes. It could lead to a significant reduction in
agricultural output, especially in poor countries. The technology is
available to reduce emissions, said the report by the U.N. Foundation
and Sigma Xi, but policy makers must act immediately by improving
efficiency in the transportation sector, improving design of commercial
and residential buildings, and expanding the use of bio-fuels by use of
incentives, the report said. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Aliyah Shahid

United Nations (UPI) Mar 05, 2007

Despite a recent plunge into the deep freeze, much of the U.S. East
Coast and Midwest have been going through an extraordinarily warm winter
with temperatures running 10 to 20 degrees higher than normal in many
places. This unusually warm weather, coupled with severe droughts and
downpours worldwide, demonstrate how climate change may be one of the
greatest environmental threats for humanity.

A report released Tuesday by the U.N. Foundation and Sigma Xi, a
scientific research society, said exceeding 2 to 2.5 degrees Celsius
above the pre-industrial global temperature levels in the year 1750
would "sharply increase the risk of intolerable impacts" on the
present-day environment. Researches expect continuing increases of 0.2
to 0.4 degrees Celsius per decade with potential abrupt peaks and
valleys in weather patterns.

Significant harm could result.

Even small increases in global temperatures could have impacts including
a rise in sea level, more frequent heat waves, droughts, extreme weather
occurrences like torrential rains and floods, increased tropical
diseases in now-temperate regions, and intensified hurricanes. It could
lead to a significant reduction in agricultural output, especially in
poor countries.

"Humanity must act collectively and urgently to change course through
leadership at all levels of society," said the report, "Confronting
Climate Change: Avoiding the Unmanageable and Managing the Unavoidable,"
released at U.N. World Headquarters in New York. "There is no more time
for delay."

Avoiding going over the 2-2.5 degrees Celsius limit requires the
stabilization of atmospheric concentrations, according to the study.
This requires global carbon dioxide emissions to peak no later than
2015-2020 at not much above their current level and decline by 2100 to
approximately a third of the 2100 readings.

The technology is available to reduce the emissions, said the report,
but policy makers must act immediately by improving efficiency in the
transportation sector, improving design of commercial and residential
buildings, and expanding the use of bio-fuels by use of incentives, the
report said.

If no action is taken, an increase of refugees from flooding or famine,
violent conflicts and international instability could result, which
could lead to more security threats worldwide.

In addition, the study said, poor nations and poor individuals who are
affected by this climate change have fewer resources available to manage
major challenges and threats. The consequences of global warming will
hit the poor the hardest partly because those areas likely to be
significantly affected first are in the poorest regions of the world.

The scientists suggested a new framework to address the problems.

The report calls for a new global policy framework through an
international agreement to a target of no more than the 2-2.5 degrees
Celsius temperature increase. Their proposal also urges establishing a
price on carbon emissions in all countries and to create mechanisms to
pay for low-emitting technologies for low-come countries.

As to whether the United States would climb aboard these initiatives,
the chances look slim under the Bush administration who has repeatedly
rebuffed global solutions, such as the Kyoto Protocol. The
administration has also rejected the idea of an international agreement
after Kyoto expires in 2012.

On a more promising note, the Democratic leadership in Congress has made
global warming a priority, holding hearings on the topic. In the past
few weeks the climate problem has been highlighted in Congress with the
release of a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
which brings together 2,500 scientists from more than 130 countries.
They predicted average world temperature will rise by approximately 3
degrees by the end of the century. They also confirmed, with 90 percent
certainty, humans are to blame for the increase in temperature.

"This report defines the seriousness and urgency that must characterize
global efforts to respond to the unfolding and far-reaching challenge of
climate change," said Timothy Wirth of the U.N. Foundation report.

Said John Holdren, a Harvard University professor of environmental
policy, "It is still possible to avoid an unmanageable degree of climate
change, but the time for action is now."

UN Chief Decries Global Warming
United Nations (AFP) March 4 - Responding to mounting pressure to speak
out on climate change, UN chief Ban Ki-moon has said it represents as
big a threat to mankind as war and vowed to raise the issue at a summit
of rich nations in June.

Since a damning United Nations report warned last month that global
fossil fuel-related pollution would raise temperatures this century,
melt polar ice and worsen floods, droughts and hurricanes, Ban had been
urged by environmentalists to lead a drive for world action to roll back
global warming.

In a speech to international high school students here, he said Thursday
that "the danger posed by war to all of humanity -- and to our planet --
is at least matched by the climate crisis and global warming."

And he pledged to raise the issue at a summit of the Group of Eight (G8)
group of major industrialized nations in Germany in June, saying failure
to take decisive measures to combat climate change would place an
appalling burden on succeeding generations.

"That would be an unconscionable legacy; one which we must all join
hands to avert," he said. "As it stands, the damage already inflicted on
our ecosystem will take decades, perhaps centuries, to reverse -- if we
act now."

Referring to the G8 summit in Germany, Ban stressed that the task of
tackling climate change was beyond the capacity of any one nation.

"These issues transcend borders," he said. "Only concerted and
coordinated international action, supported and sustained by individual
initiative, will be sufficient."

During an African tour in late January, Ban already underscored the UN's
leading role in tackling climate change which he described as "a
scientifically proven fact" and called for concrete measures to combat it.

In Nairobi, he met with UN Environment Programme (UNEP) chief Achim
Steiner, who lobbied for a summit on climate change later this year.

Environmentalists hope to hold the meeting between the G8 summit and the
next meeting in Bali of signatories to the Kyoto Protocol on global
warming in December.

In his speech to the students, Ban reiterated that action on climate
change would be one of his top priorities and welcomed a growing
awareness of the issue in industrialized countries.

"In increasing numbers, decision makers are recognizing that the cost of
inaction or delayed action will far exceed the short-term investments
needed to address this challenge," he noted.

And alluding to the Oscar award for former US vice president Al Gore's
documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" late last month, Ban said it
"suggests that, even amongst the broader public, climate change is no
longer an 'inconvenient' issue, it is an inescapable reality."

"Now, each one of us also needs to commit to the search for solutions.
We have to change the way we live, and rethink the way we travel and
transact business," he added.

In the United States, which is responsible for 25 percent of global
carbon dioxide emissions, the Democratic-led Congress is preparing to
draft legislation to combat climate change.

Democratic lawmakers have also accused Republican President George W.
Bush's administration of muzzling government-employed climatologists.

Bush has continued to favor an approach based on voluntary measures,
believing that imposing reductions could have disastrous economic
consequences.

But alarm about the perils of global warming has been growing among US
scientists, business people and some individual states.

California, the most populous and most economically influential US
state, recently decided to impose a carbon-dioxide emissions reduction.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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