Raging forest fires, frequent floods, rapidly melting glaciers and disappearing sea ice are all indisputable evidence of global warming, finally bringing to an end the divisive debate provoked by deniers of climate change. Instead, finding ways to address the climate crisis will be the focus of the international community as it meets this month in Nairobi, Kenya for the United Nations conference on climate change.
Stop Global Warming message formed to issue a call to action for Florida congressional candidates to take immediate steps to dramatically reduce global warming pollution and protect Florida from climate change.
Some 6,000 participants, including high level national leaders,
scientists, and environmentalists, are attending what is only the
second meeting of signatories of the Kyoto Protocol since the
climate change treaty came into effect. Greenpeace has official
status at the conference and its delegates are arguing for urgent
action and severe cuts in greenhouse gases.
One of the most important issues to be discussed at the
conference is new commitments to reducing greenhouse emissions from
industrialized countries under Kyoto for the period after 2012. Up
until then, the target is a five per cent (six per cent for Canada)
decrease in 1990 levels for developed nations.
Greenpeace, however, is warning that emissions must be more
drastically reduced if the rise in the average global temperature
is to be kept under two degrees above pre-industrial levels, the
limit set by the European Union, beyond which global warming would
be out of control and irreversible.
Even below this level, more frequent droughts, ferocious
hurricanes, heat waves and the deaths of coral reefs will almost
certainly be dangerous or deadly for millions of people. Concern
is mounting among scientists that the EU limit may be too high. A
recent study focused on defining dangerous levels of climate change
by NASA makes a very strong case that this warming should be
limited to no more than 1.8º C above pre-industrial levels.
Even if present levels of greenhouse gas concentrations are
maintained, the planet will continue to heat up by .3 to .5º C
above present temperatures bringing the total global average
temperature of least 1.2-1.5º C above pre-industrial levels. Over
the next decades, even with stringent emission reductions,
greenhouse gas concentrations are unlikely to drop below present
levels, and they would almost certainly peak at significantly
higher levels. Considering this almost inevitable warming,
significant action is required to keep global mean warming below 2º
C.
It is absolutely necessary that global emissions peak within a
decade and then begin to decline thereafter by at least 50 per cent
by mid-century. Achieving this will require industrialized
countries to reduce emission by at least 75 per cent by
mid-century, in line with the goals espoused by a number of
European countries and recently adopted by the State of California
as the objective of its climate policy.
Greenpeace is urging an 18 per cent reduction, at least, for the
second commitment period from 2013 to 2017 and a 30 per cent
reduction for the third commitment period from 2018 to 2022. In the
long term, Greenpeace wants an 80 per cent reduction by 2050.
Targets of at least this magnitude are a necessary to avoid
dangerous changes to the climate system. Moreover, Greenpeace
believes negotiations for the next period must be concluded no
later than 2008,
These targets are a far cry, however, from what the Canadian
government is proposing in its recently tabled Clean Air Act. It
requires no reduction in greenhouse gas emissions before 2020, and
only sets a distant and inadequate target of between 45 and 65 per
cent reduction from 2003 levels by 2050. These targets don't even
meet Canada's current commitments under Kyoto, which it hasn't so
far met and which it is arguing in Nairobi are unrealistic and
unattainable.
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