Facing the dangers of 2 degrees warming

Published by rudy Date posted on June 12, 2015

In the wake of the Group of 7 (G-7) industrialized nations’ announcement to limit global warming to 2 degrees, United Nations climate negotiators from the most vulnerable nations have questioned whether 2 degrees is too dangerous.

Unfortunately, their call to focus efforts on limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees were blocked by some of the most powerful nations at the UN climate talks: India, China and Saudi Arabia.

Care International’s Sven Harmeling labelled this move “highly concerning,” given the human rights implications of a 2-degree target.

This concern turned to protest, as young people gathered at the UN with banners of tropical storms.

They then asked negotiators to “add their name here” if they believed that a 2-degree world was safe, noting that they would use their names for the “future disasters of a 2-degree world”.

Human rights issue

Last week, a group of global human rights experts highlighted what they called the “human rights” implications of a 2-degree rise, calling it “the greatest human rights challenges of our generation.”

They argue in line with the most recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that people who are currently “marginalised are especially vulnerable to climate change,” even at only 2 degrees warming.

A UN report released earlier this year said climate change accounts for 87 percent of disasters worldwide. This figure, it must be remembered, comes with only 0.8 degrees Celsius of global temperature rise that we are now experiencing.

However, scientists are largely uncertain what the impacts of a doubling of current warming could be.

Those countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change have been concerned about the reality of 2 degrees of warming since the UN climate talks began.

Fighting for less

As the Philippines’ climate change commissioner, Mary Ann Lucille Sering argued earlier this year, “How can we possibly subscribe to more than double current warming given what less than 1 degree Celsius has entailed?”

Sering currently heads a group of countries within the UN climate talks known as the Climate Vulnerable Forum, who argue that the 2 degree target, reinforced by leaders of the G-7 this week is “inadequate, posing serious threats for fundamental human rights, labor and migration and displacement.”

Sering and other leaders of the Climate Vulnerable Forum commissioned a Human Rights inquiry into the 2 degree target earlier this year that has highlighted the severe impacts of 2 degrees for poor and marginalised groups around the world.

John Knox, who lead the inquiry as the UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights and the Environment, argued that “Even moving from one to two degrees of warming negatively affects the full enjoyment of a wide range of human rights.”

He believes it will have a multiplying impact on human rights around the world, and make it very difficult for countries to “respect, protect and promote human rights.”

These reports, and the current state of UN climate negotiations around the 2 degree target have shone light once again on the importance of support that developing countries will need to face the ongoing impacts of global warming.

Climate change impacts

The Philippines is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change.

When super typhoon Yolanda hit the country in 2013, more than 6,000 people died and millions were affected.

Many lost their homes and livelihood.

Post-disaster problems such as human trafficking was also recorded.

The impacts of climate change are fundamentally intertwined with human rights issues — the right to life, right to food, right to shelter, right to self-determination, especially among the more vulnerable sectors such as women, children, persons with disability, and indigenous peoples.

According to Oxfam, climate change is the number one threat to overcoming poverty.

Many Filipinos undergo a cycle of building and rebuilding their lives only to be continually destroyed by climate change impacts.

At less than one degree warming, the Philippines is facing extreme weather conditions, warming waters, drought, and sea level rise.

What this means is that the Philippines must be prepared to face more Yolanda’s, less food production due to low adaptive capacity of farmers and their crops and less fish catch of fisherfolks, and more migration as islands sink under water.

Is the country prepared to face these?

Mitigation, adaptation

Within the UN climate negotiations, many fear that financial support for adaptation will not meet the required targets.

This is what led negotiators and civil society actors to stage a protest at the UN climate talks, demanding that negotiators not only recognise the importance of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees, but also reinvigorate negotiations to better support the inevitable damages that will result.

Interestingly, this has been one of the key negotiating points for India over the years.

However, with its plans to push ahead with its controversial coal plant in the pristine Sundarbands region of Bangladesh, and ban NGOs from criticising, it may be set on a development path that is at odds with its developing country partners.

The Philippines must look also into its own plans for clean and renewable energy.

With more coal power plants set to be opened in many different parts of the country, the question of sincerity on the government’s call for reducing carbon emission remains questionable.

It is only a matter of time before the true reality of a warming world sets in.

*Renee Juliene Karunungan, 25, is the Program Manager for Advocacy of Dakila, an organization of artists creatively inspiring social transformation. Dakila has been working on climate justice since 2009 with Oxfam International.

Disclaimer: The views in this blog are those of the blogger and do not necessarily reflect the views of ABS-CBN Corp. –Ayeen Karunungan

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