EEMS |
2nd February 2007 (Source: Department for Food, Environment and Rural Affairs )
The most comprehensive assessment of the science of climate change, published today, has confirmed that urgent international political action is needed if we are to avoid dangerous climate change, said Environment Secretary David Miliband.
Today's report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shows that global temperatures continue to rise and that there has been an acceleration in the rate of changes observed over the last few decades.
Mr Miliband added:
"The report confirms our concerns that the window of opportunity to avoid dangerous climate change is closing more quickly than previously thought. It is another nail in the coffin of the climate change deniers and represents the most authoritative picture to date, showing that the debate over the science of climate change is well and truly over.
"What's now urgently needed is the international political commitment to take action to avoid dangerous climate change. This has been absent so far. If we are to succeed, we will require the engagement not just of environmental ministers but heads of state, prime ministers and finance ministers. This first report by the IPCC, and others to follow later this year, can provide a strong evidence base needed to move the prospects of agreement closer.
"Man-made climate change poses an increasing risk to people and business across the globe. It will have disastrous consequences if we don't act now. The economic evidence, following the Stern Review, is clear that tackling this challenge is both achievable and affordable."
Sir David King, the UK's Chief Scientific Adviser said:
"Since the publication of the last assessment of the IPCC in 2001, our understanding of man-made influences on climate and how the current climate is changing has improved. One main finding of the new IPCC report is that there has been an acceleration in the rate of changes observed in the last hundred years compared to the corresponding trends reported in 2001.
"The IPCC has played a vital function in the international climate change debate by assessing all the scientific evidence on climate change. This new publication confirms this and reinforces the role of the IPCC as the most comprehensive and authoritative source of information on climate change involving the participation of thousands of scientists from around the world and a long and open review process."
"There is now much stronger evidence that the emissions of greenhouse gases, produced, for example, as a result of fossil fuels burnt for transport, heating and industry, as well as a result of deforestation, are responsible for the warming observed since pre-industrial times. The Earth has warmed by 0.74(C since the beginning of the 20th Century".
Among the key findings highlighted are:
The UK has had a leading role in the IPCC and contributes to it through the work of the hundreds of UK scientists involved in the IPCC process, its active participation in the IPCC events and through financial support.
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