日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / OP Rana

Will Paris yield a decisive climate deal?

By OP Rana (China Daily) Updated: 2015-08-05 07:32

Will Paris yield a decisive climate deal?

A climate change campaigner holds an anti-fracking placard during a rally outside the Houses of Parliament in central London, Britain June 17, 2015. [Photo/Agencies]

The UN climate change conference in Paris in December is expected by many to deliver a decisive plan to curb global warming, more precisely to prevent global temperatures from rising 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above the pre-industrial levels. Keeping temperatures below that level is what climate scientists have been fighting for since the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where the world vowed to avoid undefined "dangerous" human interference with the climate system.

Alas, 20 years later when Rio de Janeiro hosted the UN Convention on Sustainable Development, the world hadn't done much to keep temperatures from rising above the 2C level this century. The world has not acted as an integrated community since the threat of the depleting ozone subsided after the Montreal Protocol to the Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer came into force in 1985.

The world doesn't function on the principle of one for all and all for one. Instead, it follows the principle of making the most of the available resources and exploring further to exploit potential resources.

No wonder, many climate and social scientists fear that Paris could spell the doom for the 2C target, not least because greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have reached record highs in recent years. Their fear is not unfounded, as floods, droughts and storms have been wreaking havoc across the globe, summers are getting hotter and winters colder, and sea levels have been constantly rising because of melting glaciers and disappearing Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets.

What's really worrying is that the proposed reductions in carbon emissions promised by governments - with pledges of deepening them further - are not enough to keep temperatures from rising above 2C this century. Added to that is governments' fear of incurring huge economic "losses" because of the shift from fossil fuels.

Perhaps this sorry state of affairs is what prompted David Victor, professor of international relations at the University of California, San Diego, to say recently: "Paris will be a funeral without a corpse." Victor fears the 2C goal will slip away (in Paris) despite many governments' insistence that it is still alive. Oliver Geden, of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, puts it in the right perspective: "Two degrees is a focal point for the climate debate but it doesn't seem to be a focal point for political action."

The climate is changing for the worse. And climate change deniers were right when they said that contrary to popular belief 97 percent of climate scientists don't agree on climate change, because the actual figure is not lower, but higher. More than 99.9 percent of the climate scientists agree climate change is manmade and devastating, according to a new study reviewed by MSNBC.

After reviewing more than 24,000 peer-reviewed papers on global warming published in the last two years, National Physical Sciences Consortium Director James L. Powell said only five (repeat five) scientists reject the reality of rising temperatures or the fact that humans are the cause.

Adding to the fear is a new study that says most glaciers in the Mount Everest region, in 5,500 glaciers worldwide, could disappear or drastically shrink by the end of this century. So all that hullabaloo over the so-called leaks from University of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit before the Copenhagen climate conference in 2009 were just a diversionary tactic to fool people across the world about the realities of climate change.

As if the receding glaciers were not enough, another new study says only two continuous intact forests - the Amazon and the Congo - are left on Earth. This may not seem important to many, but trees, more precisely forests, store millions of tons of carbon, preventing it from escaping into the atmosphere and adding to the GHG emissions.

Vanishing forests, retreating glaciers, higher temperatures and rising sea levels do not point to a promising future irrespective of what the spin doctors of the market want us to believe. As things stand today, the future of the world looks bleak. Only a miracle can help the world clinch a comprehensive deal in Paris to save our plant. But for that, we need a new Messiah. The question is: Where is the new Messiah?

The author is a senior editor with China Daily. oprana@hotmail.com

Most Viewed Today's Top News
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 成年人免费在线观看视频网站 | 动漫日批视频 | 经典久久 | 日韩一区二区三区免费观看 | 亚洲在线视频免费观看 | 日韩亚洲天堂 | 一区二区欧美精品 | 久久免费在线观看视频 | a在线天堂 | 欧美精品在线观看 | 狠狠干中文字幕 | 亚洲小视频 | 日韩成人精品 | 一区二区三区免费在线视频 | 自拍偷拍亚洲 | 免费日韩一区 | 成人免费网站视频 | 日本欧美三级 | 九九资源站 | 金瓶狂野欧美性猛交xxxx | 天干夜夜爽爽日日日日 | 欧美男男网站 | 亚洲高清在线观看 | 69精品久久| 色偷偷噜噜噜亚洲男人 | 亚洲免费av网站 | 成人免费三级 | 成人18视频免费69 | 亚洲欧美在线综合 | 在线你懂的 | 国产免费91 | 欧美精品hd | 婷婷激情丁香 | www亚洲 | 青草草在线视频 | 岛国精品在线播放 | 91超碰在线免费观看 | 日韩手机看片 | 日本免费一区二区三区 | 欧美视频一区二区在线 | 黄色免费大片 |