Only a
very small window remains to limit global average temperate rise to 1.5ºC
– the target set in the Paris climate agreement – and this requires an end to
new fossil fuel infrastructure and the urgent decommissioning of existing
fossil fuel facilities, the latest climate science shows.
The
International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the UN’s officially-appointed
body of scientists from around the globe, today released its latest assessment which offers pathways out of the hole
humanity is in.
It shows
that the construction of new fossil fuel infrastructure, and even the continued
use of existing fossil fuel infrastructure, will make the 1.5ºC
target impossible to reach. Governments must begin the rapid phase-out of
fossil fuels to stand a chance of limiting warming to 1.5ºC.
Overshooting would have devastating impacts, most profoundly on developing
countries least responsible and least able to cope.
European
governments are not phasing out fossil fuels anywhere near fast enough. Friends
of the Earth Europe has criticised the recent backing given to 30 fossil
gas mega-projects worth €13 billion. The group calls for Europe’s energy system to be
fossil fuel-free by 2030.
Colin
Roche, climate justice and energy coordinator for Friends of the Earth Europe, commented:
“This
report makes clear just how close we are to breaching the Paris Agreement’s 1.5
degree limit and just how urgent it is to make a clean break from fossil
fuels. There can be no justification for prolonging support and subsidies for
fossil fuels that put the planet on a pathway to more than 1.5ºC of
warming – which is already a devastating compromise for vulnerable parts
of the world.
“Putin’s
horrific fossil fuel funded invasion of Ukraine has rocked Europe and must be
the final wake-up call that breaks the stranglehold of fossil fuels on our
energy system. Clean, safe energy solutions exist and the IPCC shows they
are getting cheaper. Europe must finally put people and our planet before
industry profits, start decommissioning fossil fuels and go all-out for
renewables, insulation and energy saving.”
Once
again, the IPCC’s findings have become a political battleground. Climate
justice campaigners fear that the need for an urgent transition away from
fossil fuels to prevent catastrophic levels of warming is being undermined by
the legitimisation of ‘overshoot’ scenarios of more than 1.5 degrees, and the
prospect of introducing unproven and speculative technologies to cool the
planet at a later date.
Activists
and experts from Friends of the Earth International, the world’s largest
grassroots environmental federation, gave their responses.
Hemantha
Withanage, Chair of Friends of the Earth International, based in Sri Lanka, said:
“We
cannot betray the promise of a 1.5 degree warming threshold. If the IPCC’s WG3
report does not contain any mitigation pathways that keep us from breaching 1.5
degrees within the constraints of the current economic paradigm, that is only
proof that this economic system is incompatible with life on Earth. The
priority for our communities, movements, and decision-makers must now be to end
the era of fossil fuels and transform our societies and economies towards
sustainable systems designed to address peoples’ needs, safety and wellbeing,
not profit and greed.”
Meena
Raman, Sahabat Alam Malaysia / Friends of the Earth Malaysia, commented:
“The
notion that we will be able to overshoot 1.5 degrees and then reverse warming
later on through carbon removal and geoengineering technologies – that are
wholly speculative and unproven at scale – is anti-science and anti-human. It
betrays the cowardice and recklessness of the same actors who have failed, time
and again, to take action when it was needed. We have everything we need to
solve this problem right now, we lack only the courage of so-called global
leaders, especially from the global North who are trying to hide their
historical responsibility for creating the crisis.”