Climate Change 2021 Report: IPCC

In News

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released the report, ‘Climate Change 2021: the Physical Science Basis’.

About

  • It is the first part of IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report (AR6).
  • It sets the stage for the Conference of Parties (CoP) 26 conference in November 2021.
  • The report mentioned that Indian subcontinent may see an increase in heat waves and droughts, rainfall events and a likelihood of more cyclonic activity.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

  • An intergovernmental body of the United Nations (UN).
  • Established by World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in 1988
  • Membership: Open for all the members of the WMO and UN.
  •  Function of IPCC:
    • It provides objective scientific information in order to understand human- induced climate change. 
      • It also covers natural, political & economic impacts of these anthropogenic climate changes and possible response options.
    • IPCC does not carry out its own original research.
    • It does not monitor climate or related phenomena itself.
    • However, it conducts a systematic review of published literature and then produces a comprehensive assessment report.

Other Key Highlights of the 6th Assessment Report

  • Confidence: 
    • In the previous assessment reports, the IPCC had said that human activities were “likely”, or “most likely” behind the rising temperatures. 
    • The latest report says it was “unequivocal” that this was indeed the case.
  • Averages v/s Extremes: 
    • In a 2°C warmer world, some days can be 6°C to 8°C, or even 10°C, warmer.
    • That is how global warming will manifest at the local levels.
  • Correlation with intensified rainfall, droughts and heat waves: 
    • At a global scale, extreme daily rainfall events would intensify by about 7% for each additional degree Celsius of global warming.
  • Compound events: 
    • When two or more climate change-induced events happening back to back, triggering each other, or occurring simultaneously, it is called Compound Event.
    • For Example:
      • Recent events in Uttarakhand, involving heavy rainfall, landslides, snow avalanche, and flooding, is a good example of a compound event.
      • Glacial lake bursts in the Himalayan region accompanied by heavy rainfall and flooding.
    • Compound events can be several times deadlier.
    • If occurring one after the other, they give little time for communities to recover, thus making them much more vulnerable.
  • Aerosol Emissions: 
    • Increase in Aerosol increases monsoon precipitation in South and Southeast Asian and reduces heat waves.
  • Sea Temperature:
    • The Indian Ocean, which includes the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal, has warmed faster than the global average.
    • The sea surface temperature over Indian ocean is likely to increase by 1 to 2 °C when there is 1.5°C to 2°C global warming.
    • In the Indian Ocean, the sea temperature is heating at a higher rate than other areas, and therefore may influence other regions.
  • 1.5 degree warming was likely even before 2040
    • A global net-zero by 2050 was the minimum required to keep the temperature rise to 1.5 degree Celsius. 
    • Without India, this would not be possible
    • Even China, the world’s biggest emitter, has a net-zero goal for 2060.
  • Nationally Determined Contributions under Paris Agreement:
    • NDCs have to be updated with stronger action, mandatorily, every five years from 2025. 
    • But the Paris Agreement also “requested” countries’ NDCs by 2020. 
    • Because of the pandemic, the deadline was extended to 2021, and expired at the end of July.
    • About 110 countries have updated their NDCs, but not China, India, or South Africa.
    • India, the third largest emitter in the world, has been holding out, arguing that any further burden would jeopardise its continuing efforts to end poverty.
  • Net Zero Target
    • Net-zero is a state in which a country’s emissions are compensated by absorption and removal of GHGs from the atmosphere through natural processes as well as futuristic technologies such as carbon capture and storage.
    • It also requires phasing out fossil fuel-based energy.
    • More than 100 countries including the USA, China and EU have declared their net zero emission targets by mid century.
    • India has not yet declared its Net-Zero Target
  • Results of ambitious emission reductions might begin to show over time scales of 10 to 20 years.

Image Courtesy: TH

India’s Actions

  • Energy revolution underway: 
    • Indian efforts to combat climate change along with poverty reduction ranges from
      • household electrification to smart meters, 
      • scaling up solar and wind to new ambitions in biofuels and hydrogen, 
      • energy efficiency to clean cooking for millions, 
      • electrification of railways to electric vehicles, 
      • being the first country with a cooling action plan to skilling thousands in green jobs.
  • Next, the discourse must shift from energy to the economy
    • There are very few sunrise sectors that are not low-carbon.
    • India must tap new technologies and business models which are proven but need policy and regulatory support like
      • new technology frontiers (green hydrogen), 
      • new business models (distributed and digitalised services, for distributed energy, EV charging, cold chains), 
      • new construction materials (low-carbon cement, recycled plastic), 
      • new opportunities in the circular economy of minerals, municipal waste and agricultural residue, and 
      • new practices for sustainable agriculture and food systems. 

Way Ahead

  • Small window of opportunity to take corrective measures
    • Hypothesis that “aggressive emission cuts beginning now could reduce warming after 2050”., may set the tone for climate diplomacy.
    • In about three months from now, climate negotiators will meet in Glasgow, where upscaling climate ambitions is likely to be the major issue of contention. 
  • Need to shift from the sensational to the strategic
    • In order to stabilise rise in temperatures, two things have to happen:
      • Anthropogenic emissions must become net-zero and, 
      • In the interim, cumulative emissions cannot exceed a global carbon budget. 
    • To stay within the 1.5°C limit, starting in 2020, the remaining global carbon budget is 300-500 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide (GtCO2) (with a likelihood of 50 per cent- 83 per cent).
    • As per CEEW analysts, China would consume 87 per cent of the global carbon space (if it reached net-zero in 2060) and the US would eat up 26 per cent (if it reached net-zero in 2050) despite promising net zero. 
    • Clearly, mere announcements of net-zero targets do little to retard the “carbon grab” of the largest emitters.
  • .Net Zero v/s Poverty
    • India has rightly argued that any commitment to net-zero would mean compromising developmental goals of countries.
      • It will be highly unsustainable as Poverty is the greatest Polluter.
    • India has pointed to the developed countries’ poor track record with respect to fulfilling their technology transfer and financial-aid commitments to developing countries.

Source: TH

 

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