Report: Expanding Fossil-Fuel Plans Threaten Climate
Andrea Sears, Public News Service – PA
HARRISBURG, Pa. – Planned expansion of oil and gas development would
push global temperatures beyond the tipping point of catastrophic
climate change, according to a new report.
The report, from the Global Gas and Oil Network,
says the industry plans to invest $1.4 trillion in new extraction
projects by 2024 with 85% of that expansion happening in the United
States and Canada.
Nathalie Eddy is a field advocate with the environmental group Earthworks.
She says that would lock in 148 gigatons of carbon dioxide emissions
that could raise global temperatures more than 2 degrees Celsius.
“Projected investments in production for the next four years puts us in a
whole new bright red level of emergency in terms of how do we avert
dangerous climate change,” says Eddy.
The Paris Climate Agreement seeks to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees
Celsius to significantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate
change.
Eddy points out that rising sea levels, increasingly violent storms,
droughts, flooding and wildfires already occurring due to climate change
are a forecast of things to come.
“We’ve been told again and again by each IPCC report just how urgent and
important it is to maintain that 1.5 degrees Celsius of global warming
to avert further change,” says Eddy.
Since its founding in 1988, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change has published five comprehensive assessment reports on climate
science and a number of special reports.
Eddy emphasizes that government needs to take the lead by restricting
oil and gas licenses, contracts and permits, implementing plans to
transition to renewable energy and ending subsidies for oil and gas
infrastructure and development.
“The financing is a huge part of this absolutely unlevel playing field,”
says Eddy. “If governments were to pull those subsidies that are
supporting fossils and support renewables, it’d be a very different
future that we would see.”
The full report can be found online at ggon.org/OilGasClimate2019.