Barcelona,
Spain - Evidence is mounting day by day that mankind is to blame for
climate change, and the financial crisis is a temporary setback in the
hunt for solutions, the head of the U.N. Climate Panel said on Tuesday.
Rajendra Pachauri, whose panel shared the 2007 Nobel Peace
Prize with former U.S. vice president Al Gore, said the downturn could
dominate for 2-3 months before politicians return to focus on fixing
long-term problems like global warming.
"The evidence... is getting stronger by the day. We have
much more evidence available of what the human role is in climate
change," he told Reuters by phone from India. "One has every reason to
take action on what's already been said."
Pachauri's panel, which draws on the work of 2,500
scientists, said last year that it was at least 90 percent sure that
mankind was to blame for warming and forecast more droughts, heatwaves,
floods and rising sea levels.
He said at the moment everything seemed to be "on the back
burner" because of worries about the financial system. "I'm absolutely
sure that climate change will be the last thing people will think about
at this point in time."
"But it's not going to go away," he said. "Sooner or later,
they will come back to it." Arctic sea ice, for instance, shrank to its
smallest ever recorded area in September 2007, and came close to
breaking the record last month.