Scientist warns of growing carbon emissions
Melbourne, Dec 3:
Global discharge of greenhouse gases are growing three
times faster than in the 1990s, which could produce a temperature rise
of 4-6 degrees by 2100, a leading Australian scientist has warned.
Pep
Canadell, one of the lead authors of a new paper warning of the growth
of emissions, claimed their analysis showed that by the end of 2012,
global emissions from fossil fuels would reach the unprecedented level
of 36 billion tonnes.
“Just to put this into
perspective, this is 58 per cent over 1990... and growing about three
times faster than they were growing during the 1990s,” an AAP report
quoted him as saying.
Canadell said that 80 per cent
of that growth came from China with the rest split among emerging
economies and the developed world.
“If you look at
what’s has happened over the last year and this year and what has
happened overall over the last 10 years, we are now following perfectly
on track of the emissions path that is going to take us to anywhere
between four and six degrees by 2100 if we don’t do anything different
from what we are doing now,” he said.
He further said
that this was occurring as Europe and the US experienced major economic
difficulties with reduced industrial production.
Canadell
said there had been examples in the past when France moved to nuclear
power generation and the UK moved from coal to gas for power production
which produced significant emissions reductions.
“We
have no idea whether we can actually take these examples and put them
into a global context for many decades but there is certainly good past
experience which could allow for governments to be inspired and look at
much more aggressive and faster actions,” he said.
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