Raising the bar to keep temperatures and sea levels low across the Pacific

Raising the bar to keep temperatures and sea levels low across the Pacific

by Prof Mark Howden and ‘Ofa Ma’asi-Kaisamy*

With many parts of the Pacific still in flux due to COVID-19, a new report on climate change brings no solace for the region.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Working Group III report on Mitigation of Climate Change finds that with greenhouse gas emissions at record levels, limiting global warming to 1.5°C is only possible if global leaders commit to taking immediate and strong action.

This is a question of survival for the Pacific because of its unique vulnerabilities and the existential threats posed by climate change, which has massive implications for a region that is among the most vulnerable to climate change, especially as adaptation actions can become less effective as global temperatures increase.

For Pacific Islanders who advocate under '1.5°C to stay alive' and know that islands, cultures, and lives will be lost, and natural systems will cross dangerous points of no return at warming above this level, the focus is not on if we can limit warming to this level, but how?

Ambitious mitigation actions are absolutely needed to limit global warming to 1.5°C. The IPCC report is clear that the world has both the technology and policy tools to cost effectively reduce our emissions at the required scale and speed. Global emissions could be cut in half by 2030 at affordable costs if action is taken across all countries and sectors. This is partly thanks to increasing opportunities from cleaner and cheaper energy technologies such as solar, wind power, biofuels from organic waste? and electric vehicles but also due to the proven effectiveness of emission-reduction policy packages.

Globally greenhouse gas emissions need to peak before 2025 to limit warming to 1.5°C, highlighting the need for immediate and cooperative action on climate change mitigation. Ending the world’s dependence on fossil fuels is essential, as projected emissions from current and planned fossil fuel projects alone will take us above 1.5°C warming. The IPCC Report shows that to keep warming to 1.5oC all new fossil fuel projects must be shelved immediately.  

Significant and transformational? policy change is require    d.  If the world continues with existing climate commitments, policies and business as usual, we will reach warming of around 3.2°C by 2100. This will lead to severe costs and damage and pose threats to the survival of future generation, not only for the Pacific, but for many people and environments around the world.

But it doesn’t need to be this way.  The economic benefits of acting to address climate change far outweigh the costs over the twenty-first century.  Well designed and implemented actions to tackle climate change can go hand in hand with the Sustainable Development Goals, delivering other social, economic and environmental benefits. For example, providing access to renewable electricity plus storage across the region can help reduce emissions while improving livelihoods and generating economic opportunities.

Acknowledging that every country has a role to play in addressing climate change, many Pacific Island Countries have submitted policy commitments, known as Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), which outline their plans for reducing emissions and adapting to climate change. However, achieving these goals will require additional financial, technological and capacity building support from developed countries. This is critical for Pacific nations, where each NDC is partly conditional on external support. This IPCC report, along the previous one, show that more financial support and commitment is needed, with global climate finance falling short of the amount needed to support developing countries NDCs. In particular, high-income countries missed their 2020 target to direct $US100 billion per year to climate finance.

Support is also needed to help Pacific Island nations take advantage of carbon draw down opportunities, many of which are based on natural systems and deliver broader benefits. For example, storing carbon in 'blue' ecosystems, which would see the protection or restoration of mangrove forests, tidal marshes and seagrass ecosystems. Capacity building support can help Pacific Island nations to reap the most benefits from these projects while also planning for adverse outcomes that may arise from climate extremes.

As a region that contributes less than 0.5% of global greenhouse gas emissions, Pacific leaders will continue to advocate for stronger emission-reduction policies by high-emitting countries in the lead up to COP 27 in Egypt later this year.

Increasingly it is clear that taking action on climate change is much less costly than inaction.  The challenge now is to come together to act on the urgency of the situation at every level –globally, regionally, nationally and in our communities.  

About the authors:

Prof Mark Howden is a vice-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and director of the Institute for Climate, Energy & Disaster Solutions at the Australian National University

Ms Ofa Ma’asi-Kaisamy is manager of the Pacific Climate Change Centre at the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme.

About the report:

The Working Group III: Mitigation of Climate Change is the third report in a series being released during the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Sixth Assessment. Working Group III considers responses and solutions to the threat of climate change by reducing emissions and enhancing sinks of the greenhouse gases that are responsible for global warming. 

Picture Credit Main Photo: S.T.L Consultants 

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