Environmental activists display signs
inside the venue of the COP24 UN Climate Change Conference 2018 in Katowice,
Poland Dec 4, 2018. [Photo/Reuters]
Governments have been urged to take urgent action after a
new report predicted that global carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels and
industrial sources will reach a record high this year.
Research by the Global Carbon Project show emissions are
expected to reach 37.1 billion metric tons in 2018, up by more than 2 percent
year-on-year, due to sustained growth in oil and gas consumption.
The findings were published in report Wednesday on the
sidelines of the ongoing 24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change in Katowice, Poland.
The report said the rapid growth in low-carbon
technologies still cannot bring a peak in global emissions or help keep the
global temperature rise well below 2 C, as required by the 2015 Paris climate
agreement.
"The 2018 rise in fossil CO2 emissions place us on a
trajectory for warming that is currently well beyond 1.5 C," lead
researcher Corinne Le Quere, director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change
Research at the University of East Anglia, was quoted as saying in a media
release.
"It is not enough to support renewables," she
said. "Fossil energy needs to be phased out, and efforts to decarbonize
need to be expanded throughout the economy."
Amy Luers, executive director of Future Earth, added:
"The continued rise in global emissions is deeply concerning. The recent
IPCC report on risk of 1.5 C warming was a somber wake-up call even for many of
us deep in the science.
"Tackling climate change has now become a win-win.
We just need to start down the winning path," she said.