World still has 42 per cent chance to breach 1.5 degrees if use of fossil fuel stopped today: Study

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New Delhi: A new study revealed that if we ended fossil fuel use today there would be still have a 42 per cent chance of overshooting the goal of limiting global warming 1.5 degrees celsius above pre industrial level.

The study published in Nature Climate Change was an attempt o answer how much global warming is already guaranteed by past greenhouse gas emissions.

“Our findings make it all the more pressing that we need to rapidly reduce emissions,” lead author and University of Washington (UW) Ph.D. student in oceanography Michelle Dvorak said.

“However, most of those studies focused only on carbon dioxide. The new research looked at all potential emissions, and this makes a difference because some fossil-fuel related pollutants actually have a cooling effect.

This means that ending these emissions could reverse this cooling effect. In addition to carbon dioxide, the research considered emissions including methane, nitrogen oxide, sulfur and soot, said the statement.

The study looked at what would happen if all of these emissions were stopped immediately each year between 2021 and 2080. At the pause point, the Earth would see a 0.2 degrees Celsius increase in temperature that would persist for 10 to 20 years.

“This paper looks at the temporary warming that can’t be avoided, and that’s important if you think about components of the climate system that respond quickly to global temperature changes, including Arctic sea ice, extreme events such as heat waves or floods, and many ecosystems,” study co-author and UW associate professor of atmospheric sciences and of oceanography Kyle Armour said .

“Our study found that in all cases, we are committed by past emissions to reaching peak temperatures about five to 10 years before we experience them” he said.

The researchers found that global temperatures had a 42 percent chance of overshooting the 1.5 goal if emissions ceased now. Under a medium-emissions scenario, the chance of overshooting the 1.5 goal rose to 66 percent if fossil-fuel burning were stopped in 2029.

“They are looking at geophysical commitments,” Glen Peters of the CICERO Center for International Climate Research in Oslo, Norway told New Scientist. “In all reality, we will not get emissions to zero overnight, so that basically means we are already committed to 1.5°C.”

However, there is better news for the upper limit Paris agreement goal of keeping warming at two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels

The study further said there is currently a two percent chance of overshooting this goal if emissions ceased today, but this jumps to 66 percent if emissions continue along a medium pathway and then cease in 2057.

Meanwhile the Scientists have warned that honoring the 1.5 target is essential for avoiding the worst impacts of the climate crisis. Even if temperatures temporarily overshoot this goal, it is possible that the Earth would still cool later, E&E News pointed out. However, the effects on glaciers and sea ice, sea level rise and plant or animal extinction could not be walked back.

According to the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, meeting the 1.5 goal means cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 43 percent by 2030 and reaching net zero by the early 2050s. Policies in place as of December 2020 would put the world on track for 3.2 degrees Celsius of warming

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