Tracking the Paris Climate Deal (2015 to the 2019 NY meeting)
CoP25 or, the end begins Part 2
(September 2016) The PCD – Paris Climate Deal –
that took place last December 2015 was indeed a historic planetarium effort to
curb the Earth’s global average temperature variation; the principal intention
expressed by 195 world’s leaders who attended the Paris summit was to tackle
the Global Warming by reducing human-induced CO2 emissions, which is a
scientific cause-effect relationship. The target of such downsizes set up by
the PCD:
“2ºC
on the Earth surface, as average limit variation all over within the century,
effective since the 2020’s the latest”
It took
several years of UNFCCC meetings to reach COP21 in Paris (launched in 2007 Bali
meeting and preceded by COP 17 in Durban, COP18 in Doha, COP19 in Warsaw and,
COP20 in Lima). In Bali 2007 meeting it was agreed that: “the central task
of the AWG-KP was to decide the emission reduction commitments of
industrialised countries after the Kyoto Protocol's first commitment period
expired in 2012.”
In January 2016 we started tracking the PCD on
a regular basis by compiling information about the problem definition: The
Paris Climate Deal progresses. Original Progress Report. Quarterly review by IMBA
prof. Von VESCHLER
(OPR3) The
core of the global warming is excessive fossil fuel-fired power plants. These
emit several gases to the atmosphere, like the CO2 which, stores around the
globe at troposphere altitude for years and years. ("The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere
closest to the earth's surface where the weather takes place") How
the warming is producing, then? It all happens within a fine layer of an
average 17000 meters thick composed of water vapour in 99%. GHG's like CO2,
trap the excess radiation heat instead of letting it going back to space. Such
reduction is progressively achieved by means of stabilising/downgrading the
volume of fossil fuels (coal, crude oil and natural gas) now used to generate
electricity; striving for increasing Nuclear and RE (renewable energy) usage,
instead.
v ·Increasing the deployment of
low-carbon energy for electricity generation -currently non-fossil fuel
electricity generation is 30 per cent -16 per cent from hydropower, 5 per cent
from renewables and 11 per cent from nuclear power.
v ·Increasing the energy efficiency in
the housing and industrial sector.
v ·Promoting the electrification of
vehicles.
v ·Including on-site renewable energy
systems in existing and new buildings.
All of that is simply because out of the 2ºC’s
threshold upwards variation (agreed in the Paris December 2015 talks as the
end-century global aim), its first C degree has already been reached as
UNEP/WMO recently reported. While covenants were setting up the target, reality
had already devoured half of that. Once again, we are late, very much so.
Bearing in mind that an additional 0.5ºC variation seems to be already on the sight,
such global end-century target would then show a bias of half-century in
advance.
One of the most eminent scientists of the
global warming is Sir Robert T. Watson: "He has been Chair or co-chair
of other international scientific assessments, including the IPCC Working Group
II, the United Nations Environment Programme/World Meteorological Organization
(UNEP/WMO), and the UNEP Global Biodiversity Assessment, Professor of
Environmental Sciences; Director of Strategic Development, Tyndall at the
University of East Anglia". “The 2°C (3.6º F) temperature target, the
the threshold for the world to avoid the worst effects of climate change, could be
reached as soon as 2050.
The excess CO2 being stored in the troposphere is the driving
for a temperature variation called Global Warming, which,
in turns set the conditions for extraordinaire weather
events coined under the term 'Climate Change'
Hottest days are coming nearer, the 2ºC
variation scenario is on sight.
Tools designed to battle the GW since 2007 in
Bali has not yielded sufficient outcome. On top of that, the PCD moves like a
turtle on stones: this is their target picture as of today, October 2016, comparing
it with main emitters countries, in light of our research at the global weather tracking publications:
By IMBA prof. J. H. Von Veschler, environment senior contributor
November 2019
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario