Damage caused by rising seas, increased storms and other climate-related problems pose 'a very serious challenge to poverty eradication efforts in the developing world'
Five of the Solomon Islands have completely vanished as a result of rising sea levels. Island Conservation |
The planet’s average temperature has already risen about 1C in about 130 years, with scientists admitting that restricting this to just 0.5C more will be difficult.
As a result, the world’s gross domestic product would fall by $21 trillion by 2050, compared to $33 trillion under a ‘business-as-usual’ approach that allows global warming of 2.5 degrees. This saving of $12 trillion (about £9.6 trillion) represents about 10 per cent of global GDP.It would also “substantially” reduce the risk of the flooding of large parts of the world’s lowest lying land, “with the Greenland ice sheet facing irreversible decline most likely around 1.6C of warming”.
All the ice on Greenland would take some time to melt but would raise sea levels by seven metres once completely gone.
Keeping global warming to 1.5 per cent would mean at least 10 per cent of the coral reefs on the planet would survive; any higher and the “virtual disappearance” of this key marine ecosystem would begin.
The report, called Pursuing the 1.5C Limit, said such changes would dramatically affect the world’s economy.
“In the high-warming scenario in Bangladesh, GDP per capita growth would decrease from 6 per cent per year in a no-climate-change reference scenario, to only 4 per cent, and annual growth for China would be reduced from 2 per cent to 0.5 per cent per year,” it said.
“The contractions in India and China alone may have large implications specifically on the growth of neighbouring countries in the region, as well as the world economy.
“These reductions in macroeconomic outputs induced by climate-change impacts could therefore pose a very serious challenge to poverty eradication efforts in the developing world.
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Writing in the report’s foreword, Professor Magdy Martinez-Soliman, of the United Nations Development Programme, said: “Pursuing efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C is absolutely critical so that all countries take strong and ambitious action on the ground.
“This global threshold will guide our efforts for decades to come and shape our achievement of the goals we agreed to within the Paris Agreement.”
He said that efforts to restrict global warming would also help tackle poverty.
Climate change protests around the world |
“Reducing vulnerability of food systems can help to end hunger and malnutrition around the world.”
Links
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