01-abril-2022
Climate Change is Happening Faster Than We Thought
The UN has recently released a report that was produced by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; the report that took a detailed look
at the threats and concluded that nations are not doing enough to protect the
environment from the hazards that climate change is already bringing with it.
Melting polar ice caps, rising sea levels and abnormal weather conditions are
clearer to observe across the world, and we may well lose the ability to
reverse these if greater action is not taken.
Climate change is happening faster than most expected and it seems that
countries are not doing enough as the planet continues to heat up. The effects
of climate change are happening so rapidly that it could soon overwhelm our
ability to adapt, which would be devastating to our existence on this planet.
I totally agree with the statement of the UN Secretary General Antonio
Guterres, who said that the report serves as a ‘damning indictment of failed
climate leadership’. It is clear that many are only giving lip service to the
issue of climate change, particularly oil and gas companies who are very
innovative in making the carbon numbers balance, but make very little actual
difference in reality. This is a major issue as there is a growing need for
energy around the world, and producing more energy while producing less carbon
is indeed a huge challenge.
Heat waves, wild fires, scarcity of water, storms and floods are being
seen on an unprecedented scale worldwide and are testament to the fact that
climate change is no joke. The adverse effects are being felt widely and the
results are certainly more negative than expected. Part of the problem is that
nations have been too slow to adapt as the money is not there to help them
build the necessary infrastructures to combat the effects. If this continues to
happen, we will find more and more people forced to flee from their homes. It
is clear that we cannot let climate change just take its course and hope to
adapt to it, as early indicators are already showing that we are failing miserably
at this front.
We must ensure that global warming does not increase by more than 1.5
degrees, as scientists point out that beyond this level would be catastrophic.
In order to do so, we must work together to totally eliminate fossil fuels by
2050 and work with technology and energy companies to develop real
alternatives. We must also help the much more exposed poorer nations to climate
risks than their western counterparts.
A decade ago, there were pledges by western nations to deliver $100
billion to develop newer, cleaner sources of energy and to adapt to climate
change. Unfortunately, only a fraction of this pledged money has been
forthcoming which is essential to prop up less wealthy nations who desperately
need help. As an issue that is facing all of us, we must work together to
combat it, as otherwise our efforts will go in vain.
As well as bringing down carbon emissions, we must work on taking action
to protect our communities and use the strategies detailed in the UN report to
prepare better. If this is left uncontrolled, people with the fewest resources
and who are least responsible for this will feel the greatest impact with
farming land becoming unusable, land becoming uninhabitable, heavier rainstorms
decimating crops and extreme weather conditions making living unbearable.
We cannot allow an abdication of leadership to continue and we must
bring energy giants to account. Our survival depends on taking real action and
as the Chairman of the Consortium for Sustainable Urbanization, I call on world
leaders and energy chiefs to work together to help avert an impending crisis of
our own making.