Climate scientists are pushing for more immediate and urgent
interventions, insisting that global warming will be impossible to stop by the
time the current proposals can be agreed upon.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Recent
proposed agreements among nations across the globe, brokered by the United
Nations (UN), have provided some optimism in the human struggle to manage
climate change. Talks over such arrangements are currently underway in Lima, Peru. However, according to some
climatologists, the world cannot afford to wait for these proposals to be
ratified and implemented.
Representatives
from many nations are currently negotiating in South America and have expressed
optimism for an international agreement to reduce fossil fuel emissions in a
major coordinated effort to halt climate change. However, some believe that
with the current rate of greenhouse gas emission and reasonable estimate of how
long it would take between the proposal stage and actual beneficial effect of
the new agreement, the world cannot afford to wait.
These
scientists warn that a worldwide temperature increase of 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit
will be impossible to prevent as things are currently progressing. They are
leading the charge in pushing for more aggressive in reducing greenhouse gas
emissions. Otherwise, the scientists warn, the planet will become increasingly
unpleasant, economies will suffer, and the human race may ultimately die off.
Recently,
U.S. President Barack Obama and China President Xi Jinping struck a deal to cut
carbon emissions, an agreement that some say could end many years of failure in
forming solutions to global warming in other nations.
“I was
encouraged by the U.S.-China agreement,” Michael Oppenheimer, a professor of
geosciences and international affairs at Princeton University and a member of
the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said in an
interview with a New York Times reporter.
Oppenheimer
noted, however, that current emission trends mean that it is already too late
to prevent a temperature increase.
“What’s
already baked in are substantial changes to ecosystems, large-scale
transformations,” Oppenheimer said, adding that without a deal struck in Lima,
“things could get a lot worse.”
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