Latest news with #AimeeSlangen


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Science
- Irish Independent
Three years left before best chance of managing global temperature rise is lost
A team of scientists from 17 countries including Ireland have calculated the remaining 'carbon budget' and warn it is set to run out in 2028. Their warning comes with a slew of new data that shows all the measurements of climate change moving in the wrong direction. Sea level, for example, has risen twice as fast over the last six years compared to the previous century as warming oceans expand and ice caps melt more rapidly than before. The surge is revealed in a collaboration by 61 experts from 54 universities and institutes published today. They warn that the Earth's atmosphere can take only three more years of carbon and other greenhouse gases being pumped out at today's rate before hitting a critical stage. At that point, the accumulation of warming gases is expected to be beyond what would provide a 50pc chance of keeping global temperature rise to 1.5C. Preventing temperature rise exceeding 1.5C is the aim of the landmark Paris Agreement signed by almost all the world's nations in 2015. Technically, the agreement is not broken by breaching 1.5C because it refers to that level of temperature rise being sustained over several decades. However, the scientists behind the Indicators of Global Climate Change (IGCC) initiative point out that the 1.5C mark was already exceeded in 2024 and, while this was a record-breaking year, the likelihood of it being repeated sooner and often is increasing all the time. The IGCC initiative was set up to provide annual updates on climate change in between publication of the flagship reports of the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC), which are produced only every six or seven years. ADVERTISEMENT Its latest report shows rapid changes since the last report was published in 2021. Annual emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), the most common and long-lasting greenhouse gas, rose by 1.3pc. The amount of CO2 accumulated in the atmosphere increased by 3.1pc while concentration of methane, which has a shorter lifespan but greater short-term warming impact, increased by 3.4pc. Average temperature rise grew by 13.8pc and the remaining carbon budget dwindled by 74pc – from 500 billion tonnes of CO2 to 130 billion tonnes at the start of 2025. Sea levels rose by 26mm, counting from 2019, giving an average increase of 4.3mm per year compared to an average of 1.8mm per year over the previous 120 years. 'This seemingly small number is having an outsized impact on low-lying coastal areas, making storm surges more damaging and causing more coastal erosion,' said Dr Aimee Slangen, of the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research. 'The concerning part is that we know that sea level rise in response to climate change is relatively slow, which means that we have already locked in further increases in the coming years and decades.'


Sky News
10 hours ago
- Science
- Sky News
Global sea levels rising twice as fast as they did last century, according to major scientific report
Global sea levels are now rising twice as fast as they did last century, according to a major new scientific report. The study - which takes a laser focus on climate change in the 2020s, a critical decade to stop the worst damage - finds all 10 measures are going in the wrong direction. And most of them are doing so at a faster rate. The findings are "unprecedented" but "unsurprising", given the world continues to pump record levels of planet-warming gases into the atmosphere. "We see a clear and consistent picture that things are getting worse," said lead author Professor Piers Forster. However, the rate by which emissions are increasing has slowed down, offering a ray of hope they will soon reach their peak. Rising seas The new study found sea levels are now rising on average twice as fast, at 4.3mm a year on average since 2019, up from 1.8mm a year at the turn of the 20th century. The acceleration is stark, but within the realms of what scientists expected. That's because the warming atmosphere has sent more melting ice flowing into the sea, and the ocean water expands as it warms. For the island nation of the UK, which risks coastal flooding, cliff falls and damage to homes and buildings, with 100,000 properties expected to be threatened with coastal erosion in England within 50 years. Dr Aimee Slangen, from the NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, said: "The concerning part is that we know that sea-level rise in response to climate change is relatively slow, which means that we have already locked in further increases in the coming years and decades." A UK government spokesperson said: "We owe it to future generations to tackle the climate crisis, by becoming a clean energy superpower." They are also spending £7.9bn on flood defences to "strengthen our resilience" and protect thousands of "homes, small businesses, and vital infrastructure from this growing threat". Meanwhile, the amount of greenhouse gases the world can still emit while limiting warming to safer levels has plummeted by 74% - from 500 billion tonnes of Co2 to 130bn. That leaves just three years' worth of emissions in the budget if the world is to limit warming to no more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels - the threshold widely agreed to be the best chance of avoiding very severe impacts. The report, involving more than 60 scientists, also warned the world is warming faster than ever before, by an "unprecedented" rate of 0.27C per decade. Professor Forster later told Sky News: "There is little good news across the entire indicator set." "This is why I don't have my normal optimism." He added: "Greenhouse gas emissions needed to have started dropping significantly in 2024 if we were to keep a chance of keeping long-term warming below 1.5C. "The world has failed to do this." Change is possible Scientists urged leaders to draw up more ambitious national climate plans before the COP30 climate summit in Brazil in November. "In a rapidly changing climate, evidence-based decision-making benefits from up-to-date and timely information," said the study, Indicators of Global Climate Change 2024, published today in Earth System Science Data. Dr Valérie Masson-Delmotte, from Institut Pierre Simon Laplace, said: "What happens next depends on the choices which will be made: it is possible, by sharply reducing greenhouse gas emissions, to limit the magnitude of future warming, and protect young generations from the intensification of extreme events."