To Stop the Worst Effects of the Climate Crisis, Report Says 'The Level of Ambition Needs to be Tripled'—At Minimum
The world must do more to combat the climate crisis, a new report declares, because the rate of melting on the Earth’s poles and the increase in extreme weather events are projected to be much higher than previosuly predicted.
Those findings came from the United Nations Science Advisory Group United in Science report (pdf), published Sunday ahead of Monday’s Climate Action Summit.
“I urge leaders to heed these facts, unite behind the science,and take ambitious, urgent action to halt global heating and set a path toward a safer, more sustainable future for all,” U.N. Secretary General António Guterres writes in the report’s foreword.
The Earth is coming off of the five warmest years on record, a rise in temperatures expected to contribute to an increase in melting ice in the Arctic and Antarctic and corresponding rising seas worldwide. With more extreme tropical cyclones, fires, heatwaves, and food insecurity on the horizon, the report warns, “there is a growing recognition that climate impacts are hitting harder and sooner than climate assessments indicated even a decade ago.”
“Climate change causes and impacts are increasing rather than slowing down,” said Climate Summit co-chair Petteri Taalas.
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