The Nation - Hans Nicholas Jong*
Stephen Hawking spoke to the BBC about climate change and Donald Trump
Earlier this month, Stephen Hawking died at
his home in Cambridge at the age of 76. As one of science’s brightest
stars, he made his name from hypothesising about the past to solve the
great mysteries of the universe.
But Hawking also had much to say about
the future, recently turning his attention to climate change. In his
last years, he used his platform to warn us that human activity was
irreversibly damaging the planet and urged us to take action.
“We are close to the tipping point where global warming becomes
irreversible,” Hawking said during an interview last year with the BBC.
He didn’t stop there. He then proceeded to denounce US President Donald
Trump’s decision to withdraw from Paris climate agreement. “Trump’s
action could push the Earth over the brink, to become like Venus with a
temperature of 250 degrees and raining sulphuric acid,” Hawking said.
Sounds ominous, right?
But Hawking’s words might not be mere premonition of a distant future.
They are looking more and more likely to become a reality sooner than
expected.
The past four years has been the hottest period on record, with Nasa
reporting that 2017 was the second-hottest year in recorded history,
while scientists from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) saying that it was the third-warmest.
And the risk of such hot weather has already increased fivefold from the
past, when it occurred once in a thousand days, according to a 2015
study by climatologist Erich Fischer at the Institute for Atmospheric
and Climate Science in Zurich.
And things could get much worse if we go beyond the tipping point of a
temperature rise of 1.5 degrees Celsius. Fischer’s study shows that the
risk of hot weather will double again at a 1.5-degree increase in
temperature, and double once more when we reach a 2-degree rise.
Failure to maintain the global temperature rise could usher in a new climate regime.
According to a 2016 study published in Earth System Dynamics, a 2-degree
rise in temperature would lead to a 10-centimetre-rise in global sea
levels by 2100 and longer heat waves, which would threaten virtually all
tropical coral reefs in the world.
Such an extreme rise in sea level could permanently inundate many coastal regions and islands.
And that is just the tip of the iceberg. Other estimates predict an
ice-free Arctic in the summer, the destruction of the Amazon rainforest,
and the melting of the Siberian tundra to release planet-warming
methane from its frozen depths.
And there’s not much time left, either. Delaying the efforts to reduce
fossil fuel emissions could lead to 153 million premature deaths across
the globe from air pollution this century, according to a recently
released study led by Duke University in North Carolina.
So the next big question is, can we keep global warming within 1.5 degrees?
The answer, unfortunately, is that this would be extremely unlikely,
according to a draft UN report from the International Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC), the world’s leading authority on climate change.
“There is a very high risk that under current emissions trajectories and
current national pledges, global warming will exceed 1.5 degrees
Celsius above pre-industrial levels,” the report reads.
It also states that the 66 per cent likelihood of holding warming below
1.5 degrees without overshooting is already out of reach.
Not all hope is lost, though. The report points out that limiting global
warming to 1.5 degrees is still possible, but it will require a rapid
phase-out of net global carbon dioxide emissions and deep reductions in
non-CO2 drivers of climate change, such as methane.
With the deadline for our planet’s fate drawing near, chief executive
Andrew Higham of Mission 2020 – a collaborative initiative that aims to
drive down global emissions for full decarbonisation by 2050 – said that
policymakers had to act now, and fast. “What we need is to move fast.
We have the technology, so there’s nothing stopping us in our pathway to
1.5,” said Higham, who was in charge within the United National
Framework Convention on Climate Change for drafting and delivering the
Paris Agreement. “It seems like a small number, but it makes a really
huge difference to vulnerable communities.”
Hawking may have left the Earth and all of its problems, but the rest of
humanity is still here. It’s high time we took Hawking’s words
seriously.
*Born in Indonesia, Hans Nicholas Jong is a Jakarta-based environmental journalist.
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