| By Sue James,
on 24-04-2008 09:34
|
Views : 250  |
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Published in : News, Latest News |
Lord Stern of Brentford has warned that the gloomy predictions of
his high-profile review of the future effects of global warming
underestimated the risks, and that climate change poses a bigger threat
than he realised.
Stern said this week that new scientific
findings showed greenhouse gas emissions were causing more damage than
was understood in 2006, when he prepared his study for the government.
He pointed to last year's reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) and new research which shows that the planet's
oceans and forests are soaking up less carbon dioxide than expected.
He said: "Emissions are growing much faster than
we'd thought, the absorptive capacity of the planet is less than we'd
thought, the risks of greenhouse gases are potentially bigger than more
cautious estimates and the speed of climate change seems to be faster."
Stern
said the new findings vindicated his report, which has been criticised
by climate sceptics and some economists as exaggerating the possible
damage. "People who said I was scaremongering were profoundly wrong,"
he told a conference in London.
He said that increasing
commitments from countries to curb greenhouse gases now needed to be
translated into action. Earlier this week, Rajendra Pachauri, head of
the IPCC, said a lack of such action from developed countries could
derail attempts to seal a new global climate treaty at a crucial
meeting in Copenhagen next year.
The Stern Review was credited
with shifting the debate about climate change from an environmental
focus to the economic impacts. It said the expected increase in extreme
weather, with the associated and expensive problems of agricultural
failure, water scarcity, disease and mass migration, meant that global
warming could swallow up to 20% of the world's GDP, with the poorest
countries the worst affected. The cost of addressing the problem, it
said, could be limited to about 1% of GDP, provided it started on a
serious scale within 10 to 20 years.
Stern's study was largely
based on the previous IPCC report that appeared in 2001. The IPCC
raised the stakes last year when it said that steps to curb emissions
were needed by 2015 if the worst effects of global warming were to be
avoided. Since then, a number of polar experts have warned that the
Arctic and Antarctic are losing ice much faster than thought, and that
the sea level rise could be more severe than the IPCC suggested. Other
studies, focusing on how greenhouse gases are swapped between the land,
sea and atmosphere, have suggested that scientists have underestimated
the speed and strength with which serious climate change will strike.
Last
October, scientists warned that global warming will be "stronger than
expected and sooner than expected", after a new analysis showed carbon
dioxide is accumulating in the atmosphere much more quickly than
predicted. Experts said that the rise was partly down to soaring
economic development in China.
· This article
was amended on Monday April 21 2008. Sir Nicholas Stern became Lord
Stern of Brentford in December 2007 when he was appointed to the House
of Lords. This has been corrected in the article above.
Last update : 01-05-2008 09:21
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