Reuters
DURBAN (Reuters)—The world is getting hotter, with
2011 one of the warmest years on record, and increasing temperatures are
expected to amplify floods, droughts and other extreme weather patterns around
the planet, said a U.N. report released on Tuesday.
The World Meteorological Organisation, part of the
United Nations, said the warmest 13 years of average global temperatures have
all occurred in the 15 years since 1997.
That has contributed to extreme weather conditions
that increase the intensity of droughts and heavy precipitation across the
world, it said.
“Our science is solid and it proves unequivocally that
the world is warming and that this warming is due to human activities,” WMO
Deputy Secretary-General Jerry Lengoasa told reporters in Durban.
This year, the global climate was influenced heavily
by the strong La Nina—a phenomenon usually linked to extreme weather in
Asia-Pacific, South America and Africa, but which developed unexpectedly in the
tropical Pacific in the second half of 2010.
One of the strongest such events in 60 years, it was
closely associated with the drought in east Africa, islands in the central
equatorial Pacific and the United States, as well as severe flooding in other
parts of the world.
The report was released to coincide with the start of
U.N. climate talks this week in the South African coastal city of Durban aimed
at reaching cuts in gas emissions to head off what scientists see as a global
ecological disaster caused by climate change.
Prospects for a meaningful agreement appear bleak with
major emitters the United States and China unwilling to take on binding cuts
until the other does first, major players Japan, Canada and Russia unwilling to
extend commitments that expire next year and the European Union looking at 2015
as a deadline for reaching a new, global deal.
The report said the build-up of greenhouse gasses has
depleted sea ice caps and put the world at a tipping point of irreversible
changes in ecosystems caused by global warming.
“Concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
have reached new highs,” WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud said separately
in a statement.
“They are very rapidly approaching levels consistent
with a 2-2.4 degree Centigrade rise in average global temperatures which
scientists believe could trigger far reaching and irreversible changes in our
Earth, biosphere and oceans.”
U.N. scientists said in a separate report this month
an increase in heat waves is almost certain, while heavier rainfall, more
floods, stronger cyclones, landslides and more intense droughts are likely
across the globe this century as the Earth’s climate warms.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development said global average temperatures could rise by 3-6 degrees Celsius
by the end of the century if governments failed to contain emissions, bringing
unprecedented destruction as glaciers melt and sea levels rise and small island
states are erased from existence.
editor: It's
like heating up milk. At a certain point unwillingness to turn off the
heat will trigger the milk to boil over. Didn't we all see this happen
once in our lives? I saw a pressure cooker explode once because the pot
was too full and the security valve blocked. Reaching the threshold
means: beyond this point there's no way back. We are now approaching
this point. Not in the next generation, but within the next few years.
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