Home Energy Eco-Crisis: Critical Climate Indicators Climb To Alarming Levels

Eco-Crisis: Critical Climate Indicators Climb To Alarming Levels

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A coal plant smokestack belches clouds of noxious smoke in the air in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin, in 2015. (Charles Edward Miller/Flickr)



By Adriana Navarro

Four key climate indicators set new records in 2021, underscoring the importance to curb emissions from human activity.


The United Nations criticized “humanity’s failure to tackle climate disruption” despite sustainable technology being readily available for governments and cheaper to use than fossil fuels.”

Greenhouse gas concentrations, sea-level rise, ocean heat and ocean acidification — all significantly impacted by human activity — set new records in 2021, according to the State of the Global Climate 2021 report released by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) this week.

At the surface, extreme weather — from hurricanes and cyclones to droughts and flooding — has served as the day-to-day “face” of climate change, wreaking a heavy toll on human lives and well-being, leading to billions of dollars in economic losses and triggering food and water security and displacement, according to the WMO press release.

The report also shows how anthropogenic climate change has impacted some key factors that play into these severe weather events.

It found the global mean sea level had increased by more than double the previous rate, and ocean warming has not only increased, but started to dive deeper into the depths, albeit warming at a lower rate.

But those aren’t the only changes that the Earth’s oceans endure.

The oceans absorb around 23 percent of the annual emissions of anthropogenic carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere, acting as a carbon sink. However, a reaction with seawater leads to acidification, which can threaten organisms and ecosystem services and, in turn, impact food security, tourism and coastal protection. As the pH level of the ocean decreases, becoming more acidic, its capacity to absorb more carbon dioxide also declines.

The Intergovernal Panel on Climate Change Sixth Assessment Report previously concluded “there is very high confidence that open ocean surface pH is now the lowest it has been for at least 26,000 years and current rates of pH change are unprecedented since at least that time.”

Current ocean acidification rates in the report were found to exceed those inferred from the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) — an interval of 1,000 years roughly 55 million years ago — that included the widespread extinctions in both marine and terrestrial environments. The PETM is hypothesized to have been caused by the sudden release of methane hydrates from ocean sediments, triggered by a massive volcanic eruption and associated with large perturbations of the global carbon cycle.

Data from specific sites also indicated that levels of carbon dioxide, atmospheric methane and nitrous oxide continued to increase in 2021. The report warned the increase of atmospheric methane was a precursor of tropospheric ozone, or ozone at the ground level, which can impact human health, agriculture and ecosystems.

The report also found that 2015 to 2021 were the seven warmest years on record globally, though 2021 was “less warm” than recent years, due to the influence of moderate La Niña events at the start and end of the year. While this did have a temporary cooling effect, the average global temperature for the year was still above the pre-industrial level by about 1.11 degrees Celsius.

“It’s just a matter of time before we see another warmest year on record,” WMO Secretary-General Professor Petteri Taalas said. “Our climate is changing before our eyes. The heat trapped by human-induced greenhouse gases will warm the planet for many generations to come. Sea level rise, ocean heat and acidification will continue for hundreds of years unless means to remove carbon from the atmosphere are invented. Some glaciers have reached the point of no return — and this will have long-term repercussions in a world in which more than 2 billion people already experience water stress.”

Upon the release of the WMO State of the Climate report, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres remarked there is a way forward, but continuing to rely on fossil fuels will only be a “dead end.”

António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, warned of the consequences if the world doesn’t transition from fossil fuels. (UNclimatechange/Flickr)

“We must end fossil-fuel pollution and accelerate the renewable energy transition before we incinerate our only home,” Guterres said. “Time is running out.”

To keep the hope for limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees alive, he stressed the world must act within the decade — starting with transforming energy systems.

The starting point is “low-hanging fruit,” according to Guterres, with renewable energy technologies like wind and solar readily available and often cheaper than coal and other fossil fuels. The cost of wind energy has also declined over the past decade, along with the cost of solar energy and batteries.

He added the investment in renewables creates three times more jobs than fossil fuels. “We don’t have a moment to lose,” Guterres said. He laid out a plan of five critical actions to pave the way for a transition to renewable energy.

The first step calls for renewable energy technologies, such as battery storage, to be treated as essential and freely available. Storing renewable electricity has often been cited as the greatest barrier to the clean energy transition.

“Removing obstacles to knowledge sharing and technological transfer — including intellectual property constraints — is crucial for a rapid and fair renewable energy transition,” Guterres said. He called on governments to lead a global coalition on battery storage to fast-track innovation and deployment.

The second part of the plan includes securing, scaling up and diversifying the supply of components and raw materials for renewable energy technologies, which are concentrated in only a handful of countries.

The third point focuses on building frameworks and reforming bureaucracies that slow renewable projects through bottlenecks created by red tape, permits and grid connections.

His fourth point calls on governments to shift subsidies away from fossil fuels “to protect the poor and most vulnerable people and communities.”

“While people suffer from high prices at the pump, the oil and gas industry is raking in billions from a distorted market,” Guterres said. “This scandal must stop.”

The last point calls for private and public investments in renewable energy to be tripled, increasing investments to at least $4 trillion a year. He reasoned that while it was a big investment now, the world would reap “big rewards” in the years to come.

A view of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Portugal. Ocean warming has not only increased, but started to dive deeper into the depths. (la-cri/Flickr)

“But some developing countries pay seven times more in financing costs than developed countries,” Guterres added. “We need blended finance that provides the necessary structures to close existing funding gaps and unlock the trillions held by private actors. This means adjusted risk frameworks and more flexibility to scale up renewable finance.”

He called on multilateral development banks and development finance institutions to take responsibility and fully align their lending portfolios with the Paris Agreement by 2024 at the latest.

“Every country, city and citizen, every financial institution, company and civil society organization has a role to play,” Guterres said. “But most of all, it’s time for leaders — public and private alike — to stop talking about renewables as a distant project for the future. Because without renewables, there can be no future.”

Produced in association with AccuWeather.

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