
Burning through the guardrails
Less than one year ago, the world's top weather experts hosted a forum called 'Keeping 1.5 Alive' at the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. You've got to imagine it was the comms team and not the scientists that picked the title. The WMO issued its medium-term forecast this week and it shows the Earth will cross that symbolic threshold in two years.
The organization forecasts that temperatures will stay near or above record levels for the rest of this decade. And it estimates a 70 per cent probability that the entire five-year average will exceed 1.5 C above pre-industrial temperatures.
The timeline just keeps getting tighter. Only seven years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected the world wouldn't heat beyond 1.5 C until the 2040s. Two years ago, the IPCC authors shifted the projection to the mid-2030s. Now, we're on the doorstep.
Just 10 years ago, the nations of the world adopted the Paris Agreement, setting guardrails to keep global temperatures 'well below 2 C above pre-industrial levels,' and pledging 'efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 C.'
They didn't define the guardrails more precisely in the treaty, but the general presumption is that they refer to a temperature average, measured over many years.
Then, last year, we burned enough fossil fuels to cook our poor planet above 1.5 C for a calendar year, for the first time. But the policy wonks and other sticklers warned against alarmism. One year is not a long-term average, they cautioned — the Paris target was still alive.
Even before the Paris Agreement, '1.5 to stay alive' had become a rallying cry from island nations and other especially vulnerable countries. Chants of 'keep 1.5 alive' thundered from climate protests. Scientists itemized in painful, painstaking detail how that level of warming would impact natural ecosystems, food, weather, health and habitability.
Only seven years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected the world wouldn't heat beyond 1.5 C until the 2040s. Two years ago, the IPCC authors shifted the projection to the mid-2030s. Now, we're on the doorstep.
It was always a stretch goal. The nations of the world have been far quicker to adopt targets than to tackle fossil fuel burning. And the WMO's new forecast means any faint hope is mathematically implausible.
'There is no way, barring geoengineering, to prevent global temperatures from going over 1.5 degrees,' says Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth. Considering the fact that global temperatures will keep rising in the 2030s and have already been above 1.5 C for most of the past two years, 2027 will probably be the year the long-term temperature average exceeds 1.5 C.
For those of you who are statistically inclined, there was another startling finding from the WMO update. For the first time, supercomputers spat out a probability (an 'exceptionally unlikely' one) of an entire year above 2 C in the next five years. 'It is shocking that 2 C is plausible,' said Adam Scaife of the UK Met Office. 'It has come out as only one per cent (probability) in the next five years, but the probability will increase as the climate warms.'
All these forecasts and figures become a lot less abstract on the ground. Both Manitoba and Saskatchewan declared province-wide states of emergency this week as wildfires rage. Over 17,000 people have fled their homes in Manitoba alone. 'That is a sign of a changing climate that we are going to have to adapt to,' warned Premier Wab Kinew.
Grand Chief Kyra Wilson of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs said the wildfires highlight the injustice of climate impacts on Indigenous communities. 'Our First Nations are strong and resilient, but they should not have to face these growing climate threats alone,' Wilson said.
In Switzerland, this week's climate evacuations were driven by ice, not fire. The village of Blatten was almost completely buried by nine million tonnes of ice, rock and mud as temperatures thawed out the permafrost and the Birch Glacier collapsed.
Glaciers in Switzerland have lost about 40 per cent of their volume since 2000 and the loss is accelerating. 'The last few years have been particularly bad,' said Daniel Farinotti, a glaciologist at ETH Zurich. 'In 2022 and 2023 alone, 10 per cent of Switzerland's glacial ice was lost due to record-high summer temperatures.'
Melting glaciers can collapse catastrophically — as happened to Blatten — or melt into lakes that later burst through their natural dams. These 'glacial lake outburst floods' (GLOFs) are likened to inland tsunamis and have been happening in the Himalayas and Andes without the drone footage and media coverage of Blatten. Fifteen million people are estimated to be at risk from catastrophic GLOFs.
Whether these disasters arrive through fire or ice, the obvious common thread is our overheating planet. But another is the role of forecasters. The residents of Blatten and all their animals were evacuated more than a week before the glacier collapse, thanks to advance warnings from glaciologists. Many thousands of people sheltering in wildfire evacuation centres are distraught and fearful, but they got to safety because they heeded the fire and weather forecasters. It's one of humanity's superpowers — this capacity to forecast into the future and act in the present — and it's one we desperately need, as we burn through the guardrails and the timelines tighten.
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National Observer
3 days ago
- National Observer
Burning through the guardrails
Less than one year ago, the world's top weather experts hosted a forum called 'Keeping 1.5 Alive' at the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. You've got to imagine it was the comms team and not the scientists that picked the title. The WMO issued its medium-term forecast this week and it shows the Earth will cross that symbolic threshold in two years. The organization forecasts that temperatures will stay near or above record levels for the rest of this decade. And it estimates a 70 per cent probability that the entire five-year average will exceed 1.5 C above pre-industrial temperatures. The timeline just keeps getting tighter. Only seven years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected the world wouldn't heat beyond 1.5 C until the 2040s. Two years ago, the IPCC authors shifted the projection to the mid-2030s. Now, we're on the doorstep. Just 10 years ago, the nations of the world adopted the Paris Agreement, setting guardrails to keep global temperatures 'well below 2 C above pre-industrial levels,' and pledging 'efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 C.' They didn't define the guardrails more precisely in the treaty, but the general presumption is that they refer to a temperature average, measured over many years. Then, last year, we burned enough fossil fuels to cook our poor planet above 1.5 C for a calendar year, for the first time. But the policy wonks and other sticklers warned against alarmism. One year is not a long-term average, they cautioned — the Paris target was still alive. Even before the Paris Agreement, '1.5 to stay alive' had become a rallying cry from island nations and other especially vulnerable countries. Chants of 'keep 1.5 alive' thundered from climate protests. Scientists itemized in painful, painstaking detail how that level of warming would impact natural ecosystems, food, weather, health and habitability. Only seven years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected the world wouldn't heat beyond 1.5 C until the 2040s. Two years ago, the IPCC authors shifted the projection to the mid-2030s. Now, we're on the doorstep. It was always a stretch goal. The nations of the world have been far quicker to adopt targets than to tackle fossil fuel burning. And the WMO's new forecast means any faint hope is mathematically implausible. 'There is no way, barring geoengineering, to prevent global temperatures from going over 1.5 degrees,' says Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth. Considering the fact that global temperatures will keep rising in the 2030s and have already been above 1.5 C for most of the past two years, 2027 will probably be the year the long-term temperature average exceeds 1.5 C. For those of you who are statistically inclined, there was another startling finding from the WMO update. For the first time, supercomputers spat out a probability (an 'exceptionally unlikely' one) of an entire year above 2 C in the next five years. 'It is shocking that 2 C is plausible,' said Adam Scaife of the UK Met Office. 'It has come out as only one per cent (probability) in the next five years, but the probability will increase as the climate warms.' All these forecasts and figures become a lot less abstract on the ground. Both Manitoba and Saskatchewan declared province-wide states of emergency this week as wildfires rage. Over 17,000 people have fled their homes in Manitoba alone. 'That is a sign of a changing climate that we are going to have to adapt to,' warned Premier Wab Kinew. Grand Chief Kyra Wilson of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs said the wildfires highlight the injustice of climate impacts on Indigenous communities. 'Our First Nations are strong and resilient, but they should not have to face these growing climate threats alone,' Wilson said. In Switzerland, this week's climate evacuations were driven by ice, not fire. The village of Blatten was almost completely buried by nine million tonnes of ice, rock and mud as temperatures thawed out the permafrost and the Birch Glacier collapsed. Glaciers in Switzerland have lost about 40 per cent of their volume since 2000 and the loss is accelerating. 'The last few years have been particularly bad,' said Daniel Farinotti, a glaciologist at ETH Zurich. 'In 2022 and 2023 alone, 10 per cent of Switzerland's glacial ice was lost due to record-high summer temperatures.' Melting glaciers can collapse catastrophically — as happened to Blatten — or melt into lakes that later burst through their natural dams. These 'glacial lake outburst floods' (GLOFs) are likened to inland tsunamis and have been happening in the Himalayas and Andes without the drone footage and media coverage of Blatten. Fifteen million people are estimated to be at risk from catastrophic GLOFs. Whether these disasters arrive through fire or ice, the obvious common thread is our overheating planet. But another is the role of forecasters. The residents of Blatten and all their animals were evacuated more than a week before the glacier collapse, thanks to advance warnings from glaciologists. Many thousands of people sheltering in wildfire evacuation centres are distraught and fearful, but they got to safety because they heeded the fire and weather forecasters. It's one of humanity's superpowers — this capacity to forecast into the future and act in the present — and it's one we desperately need, as we burn through the guardrails and the timelines tighten.


Vancouver Sun
4 days ago
- Vancouver Sun
B.C. climate news: Evacuation order for wildfire in B.C.'s Peace River Swiss glacier collapse renews focus on risks of climate change as glaciers retreat
Here's the latest news concerning climate change and biodiversity loss in B.C. and around the world, from the steps leaders are taking to address the problems, to all the up-to-date science. Check back every Saturday for more climate and environmental news or sign up for our Climate Connected newsletter HERE. • Evacuation order for wildfire in B.C.'s Peace River • Evacuee describes 'surreal' speed of B.C. wildfire that quadrupled in size • Saskatchewan and Manitoba declare provincial wildfire emergencies • Swiss glacier collapse renews focus on risks of climate change as glaciers retreat around the world Human activities like burning fossil fuels and farming livestock are the main drivers of climate change, according to the UN's intergovernmental panel on climate change. This causes heat-trapping greenhouse gas levels in Earth's atmosphere, increasing the planet's surface temperature. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. The panel, which is made up of scientists from around the world, has warned for decades that wildfires and severe weather, such as B.C.'s deadly heat dome and catastrophic flooding in 2021, would become more frequent and intense because of the climate emergency. It has issued a code red for humanity and warns the window to limit warming to 1.5 C above pre-industrial times is closing. According to NASA climate scientists, human activities have raised the atmosphere's carbon dioxide content by 50 per cent in less than 200 years, and 'there is unequivocal evidence that Earth is warming at an unprecedented rate.' And it continues to rise. As of May 5, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen to 429.64 parts per million, up from 428.15 parts per million last month and 427.09 ppm in March, according to NOAA data measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory, a global atmosphere monitoring lab in Hawaii. The NOAA notes there has been a steady rise in CO2 from under 320 ppm in 1960. • The Earth is now about 1.3 C warmer than it was in the 1800s. • 2024 was hottest year on record globally, beating the record in 2023. • The global average temperature in 2023 reached 1.48 C higher than the pre-industrial average, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service. In 2024, it breached the 1.5 C threshold at 1.55 C. • The past 10 years (2015-2024) are the 10 warmest on record. • Human activities have raised atmospheric concentrations of CO2 by nearly 49 per cent above pre-industrial levels starting in 1850. • The world is not on track to meet the Paris Agreement target to keep global temperature from exceeding 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels, the upper limit to avoid the worst fallout from climate change including sea level rise, and more intense drought, heat waves and wildfires. • On the current path of carbon dioxide emissions, the temperature could increase by as much 3.6 C this century, according to the IPCC. • In April, 2022 greenhouse gas concentrations reached record new highs and show no sign of slowing. • Emissions must drop 7.6 per cent per year from 2020 to 2030 to keep temperatures from exceeding 1.5 C and 2.7 per cent per year to stay below 2 C. • There is global scientific consensus that the climate is warming and that humans are the cause. (Source: United Nations IPCC , World Meteorological Organization , UNEP , NASA , ) The Peace River Regional District in northeastern B.C. has issued an evacuation order for properties threatened by an out-of-control wildfire. The province's emergency information service said Thursday afternoon that the Kiskatinaw River fire south of Dawson Creek, measuring about 1,100 hectares, poses a threat to human life. The evacuation order was issued for homes around Kelly Lake and areas north of Campbell Lake, west of Tent Lake, south of Twin Lakes, and east to the Alberta border. The Peace River Regional District said people should evacuate to Dawson Creek. The fire was burning close to the Pembina Steeprock gas processing facility and Highway 52 E, also known as the Heritage Highway. Read the full story here. —The Canadian Press Shelley Calliou of the Kelly Lake Cree Nation said it was 'surreal' how fast a wildfire threatening the community in northeast British Columbia moved. She said she was told by the RCMP at 6 p.m. Thursday that she had a two-hour window to evacuate, with the Kiskatinaw River fire 18 kilometres southwest of the unincorporated community of Kelly Lake. 'Within those two hours, it moved 10 kilometres. It's fast-moving,' said Calliou on Friday from Dawson Creek, B.C., where she said about 70 people had fled, about 80 kilometres north. The fire that prompted the evacuation order for Kelly Lake and nearby areas on Thursday quadrupled in size overnight, as firefighters warned of 'intensifying conditions' in the parched northeast of the province where most fire activity is concentrated. The B.C. Wildfire Service reported that the out-of-control blaze in the Peace River Regional District, near the Alberta boundary, was about 46 square kilometres in size on Friday, up from 11 square kilometres Thursday afternoon. Read the full story here. —The Canadian Press Thousands of people in Saskatchewan have been forced to leave their homes and flee to nearby cities as massive wildfires have ravaged through communities and campgrounds, and blocked off highways for evacuation routes. Communities under evacuation orders include Pelican Narrows, Hall Lake, Brabant Lake, Canoe Lake, Lower Fishing Lake, Piprell Lake, East Trout Lake, Little Bear Lake and Whiteswan Bay. Additional communities facing pre-evacuation orders include Narrow Hills Provincial Park, the Resort division of Trout Lake, Smeaton, Choiceland, Love, Creighton, Sikachu Lake Clam bridge, and Flin Flon, Man. Provincewide, Saskatchewan declared a state of emergency in its fight against the rampaging wildfires. The declaration by Premier Scott Moe came one day after his Manitoba counterpart Wab Kinew did the same. 'It's a very serious situation that we're faced with,' Moe told a news conference in Prince Albert. 'We do need some rainfall. We need that sooner rather than later, and in light of that not being in the forecast, we most certainly are putting in place every measure possible to prepare the province.' Read the full story here. —Saskatoon StarPhoenix There's no rain in the forecast for Flin Flon, Manitoba over the next week as crews there fight a wildfire that's raging nearby. Temperatures throughout the weekend are expected to range from the low to high 20s, before cooling off. Thousands have evacuated the northwestern Manitoba city, including municipal government officials and health-care professionals. Flin Flon mayor George Fontaine said on Friday that unless things changed, the fire was projected to take chunks out of the town. As of now, wildfires in Manitoba have displaced more than 17,000 people. Thousands have also been affected by wildfires in Saskatchewan and Alberta, with 1,300 people in the community of Swan Hills northwest of Edmonton already forced from their homes. Read the full story here. —The Canadian Press If you were out strolling in Stanley Park over the weekend you may have noticed a thick layer of slimy algae all over Lost Lagoon. Although not unusual, these algae blooms typically appear in late July or August, not in May. Over the years, the lake near the entrance of Stanley Park has become rife with pollution, sediment, eutrophication — run-off from land causing excessive nutrients, depriving the lake of oxygen — and invasive species. Experts say drought and increased heat from human-caused climate change, along with eutrophication, particularly high levels of phosphorus, are contributing to the algae blooms. The Vancouver park board and the Stanley Park Ecological Society have been working on solutions as the lake continues to degrade but so far nothing specific has been planned. Read the full story here. —Tiffany Crawford A huge mass of rock and ice from a glacier thundered down a Swiss mountainside on Wednesday, sending plumes of dust skyward and coating with mud nearly all of an Alpine village that authorities had evacuated earlier this month as a precaution. Video on social media and Swiss TV showed the mudslide near Blatten, in the southern Lötschental valley, with homes and buildings partially submerged under a mass of brownish sludge. Regional police said a 64-year-old man was reported missing, and search and rescue operations involving a drone with a thermal camera were underway. 'What I can tell you at the moment is that about 90 per cent of the village is covered or destroyed, so it's a major catastrophe that has happened here in Blatten,' Stephane Ganzer, the head of security in the southern Valais region, told local TV channel Canal9. A The regional government said in a statement that a large chunk of the Birch Glacier above the village had broken off, causing the landslide which also buried the nearby Lonza River bed, raising the possibility of dammed water flows. 'There's a risk that the situation could get worse,' Ganzer said, alluding to the blocked river. Read the full story here. —The Associated Press The landslide that buried most of a Swiss village this week is focusing renewed attention on the role of global warming in glacier collapses around the world and the increasing dangers. How glaciers collapse — from the Alps and Andes to the Himalayas and Antarctica — can differ, scientists say. But in almost every instance, climate change is playing a role. In Switzerland, the mountainside gave way Wednesday near the village of Blatten, in the southern Lötschental valley, because the rock face above the Birch Glacier had become unstable when mountain permafrost melted, causing debris to fall and cover the glacier in recent years, said Martin Truffer, a physics professor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks who studies how glaciers move. While the debris insulated the glacier and slowed melting, its weight caused the ice to begin moving — which accelerated dramatically a few weeks ago. Authorities ordered the evacuation of about 300 people, as well as all livestock, from the village in recent days, 'when it became clear that there's a whole mountainside that's about to collapse,' said Truffer, who is from Switzerland. Lakes that form at the base of glaciers as they melt and retreat also sometimes burst, often with catastrophic results. Water can even lift an entire glacier, allowing it to drain, said Truffer, adding that Alaska's capital of Juneau has flooded in recent years because a lake forms every year on a rapidly retreating glacier and eventually bursts. Read the full story here. —The Associated Press Researchers at the University of B.C. have discovered that millions of seahorses are being traded illegally around the world on hidden routes, putting many species at risk of becoming endangered or extinct. The study, published this week in the scientific journal Conservation Biology, found nearly five million seahorses, worth an estimated $29 million, were seized by authorities in 62 countries over a 10-year span at airports in passenger baggage or shipped in sea cargo. However, researchers believe the number of seahorses on the illegal trade market is significantly higher, as the data show only the shipments that were seized. They also found emerging trade routes for dried seahorses in Europe and Latin America, in addition to already known routes such as Thailand to Hong Kong, China and Taiwan. For example, researchers were surprised to learn there was poaching in European waters and that different species of seahorse are showing up in unusual trade routes, said Sarah Foster, who holds a PhD in resource management and is the program leader with Project Seahorse at UBC's Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. Foster said of the 46 known species of seahorse, 14 are considered to be threatened with extinction, mostly because of trawling and trade. Read the full story here. —Tiffany Crawford

CBC
28-05-2025
- CBC
Forecast for the next 5 years? Record-breakingly hot, UN weather agency says
Social Sharing There's a very high chance that one of the next five years will set a new heat record. It's also very likely that the next five years will see average temperatures above the lower limit in the Paris Agreement on climate change, the UN weather agency forecasts. And the Arctic is warming at more than triple the global average rate. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said Wednesday that this would all fuel more extreme weather. "Every additional fraction of a degree of warming drives more harmful heatwaves, extreme rainfall events, intense droughts, melting of ice sheets, sea ice, and glaciers, heating of the ocean, and rising sea levels," it said in a statement. From this year until the end of 2029, the mean near-surface temperature globally is forecast to be between 1.2 C and 1.9 C higher than pre-industrial levels of the years 1850-1900, the WMO said in a new report. WATCH | 2024 'virtually certain' to be warmest year on record: 2024 'virtually certain' to be warmest year on record 7 months ago Duration 1:58 Scientists warn that this year could end 1.5 C hotter than pre-industrial times, surpassing the current record of 1.48 C set just last year. Some experts now fear Donald Trump's less-than-friendly stance on climate change could make the crisis even worse. There is an 80 per cent chance that at least one of the next five years will see record heat, and a 70 per cent likelihood that average warming will exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Last year, the hottest year on record, the WMO reported the first breach of the lower 2015 Paris climate agreement target, which committed countries to "pursue efforts" to limit global warming to 1.5 C, while "holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2 C above pre-industrial levels." However, those targets are based on 20-year average temperatures. That means the measured and forecast temperatures do not yet officially breach the lower limit of the Paris Agreement. What the Arctic and Amazon can expect In the Arctic, the above-average projected warming will accelerate ice melt in the Arctic and northwest Pacific Ocean. The WMO report said Arctic warming was predicted to be more than three-and-a-half times the global average, at 2.4 C above the average temperature during the most recent 30-year baseline period over the next five winters. WATCH | 2027: the year with no sea ice? 2027: the year with no sea-ice? 6 months ago Duration 1:47 Overall global temperatures will remain at or near record levels until the end of the decade, the report said. Above-average rainfall is forecast in parts of the world, including the Sahel, northern Europe, Alaska and northern Siberia, for the months between May and September between 2025 and 2029, while drier-than-average conditions are foreseen this season over the Amazon, according to the weather agency.