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By James Murray
BusinessGreen
Thursday 17 April 2008
Climate change expert calls for toughening of emission reduction targets.
Nicholas
Stern has implied that UK and European efforts to cut carbon emissions
could prove well short of what is required after admitting yesterday
that he "badly underestimated the degree of damages and risks of
climate change " in his ground-breaking 2006 report.
The Stern Review
has been widely employed as the basis of much of the UK government's
climate change policy, with ministers repeatedly citing its conclusion
that it would be more cost effective to cut emissions now than attempt
to adapt to rising temperatures.
The
report argued that emissions would need to be cut to at least 25 per
cent below current levels if a dangerous temperature rise of over two
degrees is to be avoided - a scenario the report argued would trigger
an economic crisis on the scale of the Great Depression. Such a
reduction would require a cut in emissions from developed economies in
the region of 60 per cent, a target the government subsequently adopted
as part of its climate change bill.
But
speaking in an interview with Reuters yesterday, Lord Stern admitted
the report underestimated the scale and pace of climate change and
urged politicians to step up action to curb emissions.
He
said that the latest climate science showed that not only were
emissions rising faster than thought, the ability of the earth to
absorb carbon dioxide in so-called carbon sinks was deteriorating
faster than expected.
"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," he said.
Stern
added that to minimise the risks of dangerous climate change, the
original target for global emissions would have to be doubled to a 50
per cent cut by 2050. He said that such a target would require the US
to cut its emissions by up to 90 per cent by then.
Friends
of the Earth welcomed Lord Stern's new stance, which is expected to
increase pressure on the government to set a more demanding emissions
reduction target as part of the climate change bill.
"Lord
Stern is rightly calling for a massive step-up in the effort to tackle
climate change," said Friends of the Earth executive director Tony
Juniper. " The UK government urgently needs to ramp up investment in
energy efficiency and renewables and strengthen the Climate Change Bill
to include 80 per cent cuts in carbon dioxide emissions by 2050."
Prime
minister Gordon Brown has said that the new climate change committee
will undertake a review of the current 60 per cent target and recommend
whether or not it should be changed.
Lord
Stern's comments came a day after a the results of a new computer model
from a Finnish UK team of oceanographers predicted sea levels could
climb by between 0.8m and 1.5m by the end of the century.
The research from the Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory suggests that estimates from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that sea levels will rise by between 28cm and 43cm are far too conservative.
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