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The warming climate is undermining biodiversity by accelerating
habitat loss, according to Vital Signs 2007-2008.
Photo by metrognome0 via Flickr
Washington, D.C.-Consumption of
energy and many other critical resources is consistently breaking
records, disrupting the climate and undermining life on the planet,
according to the latest Worldwatch Institute report, Vital
Signs 2007-2008.
The 44 trends tracked in Vital Signs illustrate the urgent need
to check consumption of energy and other resources that are contributing
to the climate crisis, starting with the largest polluter, the United
States, which accounted for over 21 percent of global carbon emissions
from fossil fuel burning in 2005.
Europe, already feeling the effects of climate change, should pressure
the U.S. to join international climate negotiations, according to
Erik Assadourian, Vital Signs Project Director.
"The world is running out of time to head off catastrophic
climate change, and it is essential that Europe and the rest of
the international community bring pressure to bear on U.S. policy
makers to address the climate crisis," said Assadourian, who
spoke at the Barcelona launch of Vital Signs. "The United States
must be held accountable for its emissions, double the per capita
level in Europe, and should follow the EU lead by committing to
reducing its total greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050."
This summer, the European Union has become a showcase for how the
world will be transformed by climate change, including tragic fires
in Greece and the Canary Islands, dramatic floods in England, and
heat waves across the Continent. Assadourian urged European leaders
to push the U.S. to engage more constructively with the international
community on climate change, starting at the United Nations late
this month and in the Bali Climate negotiations at the end of the
year.
With a global population of 6.6 billion and growing, the ecosystem
services upon which life depends are being stretched to the limit
due to record levels of consumption:
- In 2006, the world used 3.9 billion tons of oil. Fossil
fuel usage in 2005 produced 7.6 billion tons of carbon
emissions, and atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide reached
380 parts per million.
- More wood was removed from forests in 2005 than ever before.
- Steel production grew 10 percent to a record 1.24 billion tons
in 2006, while primary aluminum
output increased to a record 33 million tons. Aluminum
production accounted for roughly 3 percent of global electricity
use.
- Meat production hit a record
276 million tons (43 kg per person) in 2006.
- Meat consumption is one of several factors driving soybean
demand. Rapid South American expansion of soybean plantations
could displace 22 million hectares of tropical forest and savanna
in the next 20 years.
- The rise in global seafood consumption
comes even as many fish species become scarcer: in 2004, 156 million
tons of seafood was eaten, an average of three times as much seafood
per person than in 1950.
The expanding world population's appetite for everything from everyday
items such as eggs to major consumer goods such as automobiles is
helping to drive climate change, which is endangering organisms
on the land and in the sea.
- The warming climate is undermining biodiversity
by accelerating habitat loss, altering the timing of animal migrations
and plant flowerings, and shifting some species towards the poles
and to higher altitudes.
- The oceans have absorbed about
half of the carbon dioxide emitted by humans in the last 200 years.
Climate change is altering fish migration routes, pushing up sea
levels, intensifying coastal erosion, raising ocean acidity, and
interfering with currents that move vital nutrients upward from
the deep sea.
- Despite a relatively calm hurricane season in the U.S. in 2006,
the world experienced more weather-related
disasters than in any of the previous three years. Nearly
100 million people were affected.
The world is
running out of time to head off catastrophic climate change, and
it is essential that Europe and the rest of the international community
bring pressure to bear on U.S. policy makers to address the climate
crisis.
While U.S. carbon emissions continue to grow, the fastest growth
is occurring in Asia, particularly China and India. But without
a U.S. commitment to emissions constraints, persuading China and
India to commit to reductions is unlikely. "The only hope for
reducing the world's carbon emissions is for the U.S. to begin reducing
its emissions and cooperating with other nations immediately. The
EU may be the only entity that can make that happen," said
Assadourian.
"With the U.S. Congress preparing to take up far-ranging climate
legislation this fall, and with President Bush planning to hold
an international climate change summit in Washington, now is the
time to act. If the U.S. and other nations walk away without concrete
plans to implement a binding agreement, the EU should not hesitate
to use its diplomatic clout to press the issue," suggested
Assadourian.
Already, the window to prevent catastrophic climate change appears
to be closing. Some governments are starting to redirect their attention
away from climate change mitigation and towards staking their claims
in a warming world. "Canada is spending $3 billion to build
eight new patrol boats to reinforce its claim over the Arctic waterways.
Denmark and Russia are starting to vie for control over the Lomonosov
Ridge, where new sources of oil and natural gas could be accessed
if the Arctic Circle becomes ice free-fossil fuels that will further
exacerbate climate change. These actions assume that a warming world
is here," said Assadourian.
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