The Prague Post - Dreaming the impossible dream: the 1.5C climate target

EUR -
AED 4.278562
AFN 80.439798
ALL 97.636168
AMD 447.169487
ANG 2.084779
AOA 1068.191957
ARS 1483.72337
AUD 1.785183
AWG 2.096778
AZN 1.985098
BAM 1.956525
BBD 2.351071
BDT 141.362366
BGN 1.957431
BHD 0.439233
BIF 3470.285525
BMD 1.164877
BND 1.494654
BOB 8.045981
BRL 6.47299
BSD 1.164431
BTN 100.244134
BWP 15.633791
BYN 3.810712
BYR 22831.579684
BZD 2.338966
CAD 1.598275
CDF 3361.833794
CHF 0.932315
CLF 0.029216
CLP 1121.158148
CNY 8.368124
CNH 8.363761
COP 4672.995328
CRC 587.617676
CUC 1.164877
CUP 30.869228
CVE 110.305861
CZK 24.622929
DJF 207.146735
DKK 7.463411
DOP 70.326051
DZD 151.713943
EGP 57.558604
ERN 17.473148
ETB 161.791734
FJD 2.623071
FKP 0.868492
GBP 0.865556
GEL 3.157063
GGP 0.868492
GHS 12.139497
GIP 0.868492
GMD 83.293695
GNF 10103.74281
GTQ 8.940312
GYD 243.620246
HKD 9.142918
HNL 30.475289
HRK 7.538845
HTG 152.886635
HUF 399.039732
IDR 18994.476445
ILS 3.910747
IMP 0.868492
INR 100.342289
IQD 1525.365053
IRR 49055.85197
ISK 142.033977
JEP 0.868492
JMD 186.208979
JOD 0.825902
JPY 172.97481
KES 150.443546
KGS 101.868538
KHR 4666.768811
KMF 495.651804
KPW 1048.430728
KRW 1619.073489
KWD 0.355951
KYD 0.970359
KZT 620.749949
LAK 25111.302179
LBP 104333.048921
LKR 351.310139
LRD 233.46849
LSL 20.616737
LTL 3.439578
LVL 0.704622
LYD 6.333346
MAD 10.5293
MDL 19.807337
MGA 5181.91958
MKD 61.582813
MMK 2445.37205
MNT 4177.975193
MOP 9.413968
MRU 46.320159
MUR 53.232587
MVR 17.945955
MWK 2019.147969
MXN 21.807397
MYR 4.941991
MZN 74.504928
NAD 20.616737
NGN 1780.420371
NIO 42.855875
NOK 11.8297
NPR 160.390415
NZD 1.949144
OMR 0.447877
PAB 1.164431
PEN 4.144835
PGK 4.821786
PHP 66.445688
PKR 331.630048
PLN 4.250868
PYG 9012.338512
QAR 4.233768
RON 5.074432
RSD 117.157308
RUB 91.446375
RWF 1682.637758
SAR 4.36955
SBD 9.667132
SCR 17.104812
SDG 699.507822
SEK 11.25107
SGD 1.494723
SHP 0.91541
SLE 26.617048
SLL 24426.882668
SOS 665.446507
SRD 42.962995
STD 24110.591973
SVC 10.188774
SYP 15146.223511
SZL 20.612636
THB 37.706947
TJS 11.207652
TMT 4.088717
TND 3.423168
TOP 2.728255
TRY 47.03889
TTD 7.904928
TWD 34.183342
TZS 3035.420109
UAH 48.629314
UGX 4172.545669
USD 1.164877
UYU 46.927384
UZS 14739.460055
VES 136.249723
VND 30473.169619
VUV 139.450355
WST 3.067463
XAF 656.205717
XAG 0.030346
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.148137
XDR 0.817485
XOF 656.200081
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.142633
ZAR 20.635735
ZMK 10485.294495
ZMW 26.810932
ZWL 375.089762
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Dreaming the impossible dream: the 1.5C climate target
Dreaming the impossible dream: the 1.5C climate target / Photo: PATRICK KOVARIK - AFP/File

Dreaming the impossible dream: the 1.5C climate target

In the realm of climate diplomacy, it's the little engine that could, the 80-to-1-odds Kentucky Derby winner, the low-budget multiverse fantasy that came out of nowhere to sweep the Oscars.

Text size:

We are talking, of course, about the Paris Agreement goal of capping Earth's average surface temperature at 1.5 degrees Celsius above levels in the late 19th century, when burning fossil fuels began to seriously heat up the planet.

At barely 1.2C above that threshold, the world today has already seen a crescendo of deadly and destructive extreme weather.

Fifteen years ago, a 1.5C limit on global warming -- championed by small island nations worried about sea level rise -- was rejected by most scientists as unrealistic and by most countries as unnecessary.

A 2C "guardrail" was assumed to be safe enough.

Today, the 1.5C target is enshrined in everything, everywhere, all at once. While technically no more than an "aspirational" goal, it has become the de facto North Star for UN climate talks, national climate plans and the business world.

From Apple and Facebook to Big Pharma and even Big Oil, multinationals have unveiled promises and plans to be "1.5C-aligned", even if most of those plans don't hold up very well under scrutiny.

You can draw a straight line from 1.5C to the science-base imperative to nearly halve global emissions by 2030 and achieve net zero around mid-century, meaning any residual carbon pollution must be offset by removals.

Both of these targets are set to be affirmed in a report summarising six years of climate science, released Monday by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

- 2C not good enough -

This raises a perplexing question, according to Beatrice Cointe, a sociologist at France's National Centre for Scientific Research and co-author of a recent study on the history of the 1.5C target.

"How did an almost impossible target become the point of reference for climate action?" she asked.

And what will happen when the world experiences its first full year at or above 1.5C, which the IPCC says could easily happen within a decade, even under aggressive emissions reduction scenarios?

"The target appears increasingly unattainable," Cointe and co-author Helene Guillemot, a historian of science at the Centre Alexandre-Koyre, wrote in the journal WIREs Climate Change.

"And yet calls to 'Keep 1.5C Alive' have been growing louder."

The backstory of the 1.5C goal reveals an interplay of science and politics, with one driving and shaping the other.

Going into the 2015 climate negotiations that yielded the breakthrough Paris treaty, it seemed unlikely that 195 nations would significantly improve on the 2C target already set in stone.

But a scientific evaluation by a UN technical body delivered ahead of the December summit sounded an alarm about the dangers of a +2C world and suggested greater ambition might be wise.

"While science on the 1.5C limit is less robust, efforts should be made to push the defence line as low as possible," it concluded.

A growing coalition of developing nations, meanwhile, had gathered behind the 1.5C goal, eventually joined by the European Union and the United States.

Emerging giants and oil exporters baulked, fearful of the constraints on their fossil-fuel dependent economies.

"China was against it, India was against it, Saudi Arabia fought us tooth-and-nail to the very end," recalled Saleemul Huq, director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development in Dhaka.

Even today, these nations remain lukewarm on the idea.

But in the end, nearly 200 nations committed to cap warming at "well below 2C", while "pursuing effort to limit the temperature increase to 1.5C."

- 'A moral target' -

It was a stunning diplomatic coup. Many scientists, however, were less than thrilled.

"It will be very hard -- if not impossible -- to keep warming below 1.5 C during the entire 21st century," Joeri Rogelj, a climate modeller currently at Imperial College London who played a key role in the technical report, told AFP at the time.

But because the target was part of the Paris Agreement, nations called on the IPCC -- which exists to brief policymakers on climate science -- for a "special report".

The resulting bombshell, delivered in October 2018, left no doubt as to the difference a half-a-degree makes: a 1.5C world will see deep change but remain liveable; a 2C world could tip the climate system into overdrive, outstripping our capacity to adapt, it warned.

Today, the IPCC -- including Rogelj, a lead author of the 2018 report -- insists that the 1.5C goal is technically feasible.

But that conclusion hangs by the thinnest of threads.

There is no scenario that avoids "overshooting" the target, and bringing temperatures back under the wire will require extracting billions of tonnes of CO2 from thin air, something we can't do yet at scale.

But whether the 1.5C target is feasible may be missing the point, say others.

"Getting 1.5 C into the agreement was a moral target," Huq told AFP not long after the Paris pact was inked.

"It's our leverage, the whip we will use to hit everybody on the back so they can go faster," he added.

"Whether we achieve it or not is going down a dark track. From now on, it's about raising ambition."

Piers Forster, director of the University of Leeds Priestley International Centre for Climate and a coordinating lead author for the IPCC, describes the 1.5C objective as a "huge, but not impossible, task".

"Hopefully the IPCC report can push the urgency," he told AFP. "If it's ignored, we would have to give up on 1.5C."

K.Dudek--TPP