‘Not the Summer of our Youth’

Soaring hot weather and political temperature pose serious dangers

The sun is blazing the earth scorched, leaving no doubts that this is not just another hot summer.

As climate change alarm bells ring louder, the UN World Meteorological Organization reports that 2019 had  the hottest June ever, with records broken from New Delhi to the Arctic Circle.

“This is not the summer of our youth,” Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Thursday at the UN Headquarters in New York.

He was making the case that global warming and rising political tensions around the world are dangerous but avoidable.

Attesting to the climate emergency, July is also on course to equal, or surpass the hottest month in recorded history, and 2015 to 2019 are likely to be the five hottest years on record.

“If we do not take action on climate change now”,  Guterres said, “these extreme weather events are just the tip of the iceberg. And that iceberg is also rapidly melting.”

Arctic Circle (Oct. 2003) -- Three Polar bears approach the starboard bow of the Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine USS Honolulu (SSN 718) while surfaced 280 miles from the North Pole.   Sighted by a lookout from the bridge (sail) of the submarine, the bears investigated the boat for almost 2 hours before leaving.  Commanded by Cmdr. Charles Harris, USS Honolulu while conducting otherwise classified operations in the Arctic, collected scientific data and water samples for U.S. and Canadian Universities as part of an agreement with the Artic Submarine Laboratory (ASL) and the National Science Foundation (NSF).  USS Honolulu is the 24th Los Angeles-class submarine, and the first original design in her class to visit the North Pole region.  Honolulu is as assigned to Commander Submarine Pacific, Submarine Squadron Three, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.  U. S. Navy photo by Chief Yeoman Alphonso Braggs.  (RELEASED)

Arctic Circle (Oct. 2003) — Three Polar bears approach the starboard bow of the Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine USS Honolulu (SSN 718) while surfaced 280 miles from the North Pole. Sighted by a lookout from the bridge (sail) of the submarine, the bears investigated the boat for almost 2 hours before leaving. Commanded by Cmdr. Charles Harris, USS Honolulu while conducting otherwise classified operations in the Arctic, collected scientific data and water samples for U.S. and Canadian Universities as part of an agreement with the Artic Submarine Laboratory (ASL) and the National Science Foundation (NSF). USS Honolulu is the 24th Los Angeles-class submarine, and the first original design in her class to visit the North Pole region. Honolulu is as assigned to Commander Submarine Pacific, Submarine Squadron Three, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. U. S. Navy photo by Chief Yeoman Alphonso Braggs. (RELEASED)

At the same time, the secretary-general found hope that many countries — from Chile to Finland,  and from the United Kingdom to the Marshall Islands — have concrete and credible plans to achieve carbon neutrality by mid-century.

“And many others — from Ethiopia to New Zealand to Fiji to Pakistan — are planting hundreds of millions of trees to reverse deforestation, buttress climate resilience, and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,” he added.

Gutteres spoke ahead of the Climate Action Summit, scheduled to be held on September 23 in New York.

The ticket to entry – for governments, business and civil society – is “bold action and much greater ambition”.

This will be needed if the world is to limit temperature increases to 1.5C and avoid the worst impacts of climate change, by cutting 45 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, and achieving carbon neutrality by 2050.

“Beautiful speeches”, he added, are therefore not enough: leaders need to come to New York on September 23 with concrete plans to reach these goals.” Guterres said that many solutions are available and are already being implemented.

These include the growing use of technology that is rendering renewable energy cheaper than fossil fuels; the planting of millions of trees to reverse deforestation, and remove carbon dioxide from the environment, the finance world increasingly pricing carbon risks into their decision-making process and calling on leaders to phase out fossil fuel subsidies; and leading businesses are recognizing that, in order to avoid huge losses, now is the time to move from the “grey”, polluting economy, to the green economy.

“We need rapid and deep changes in how we do business, generate power, build cities and feed the world.”

Guterres also turned his attention to tensions in global politics, notably in the Persian Gulf, friction between China and the US, and between nuclear-armed states.

The image shows change in temperature in 50 years Credit: NASA via Wikimedia

The image shows change in temperature in 50 years
Credit: NASA via Wikimedia

A minor miscalculation in the Persian Gulf, he said, could lead to a major confrontation, according to UN News Center.

Commenting on the recent incidents in the Strait of Hormuz – which include the diversion of a British-flagged oil tanker by Iran, the US destruction of an Iranian drone, and the UK decision to provide a naval escort for tankers – the UN chief urged respect the rights and duties related to navigation through the Strait, and its adjacent waters, in accordance with international law.

On China-US relations, Guterres said that the lessons of the Cold War must be learned, in order to avoid a new one, in which two competing blocs emerge, each with their own dominant currency, trade rules, and contradictory geopolitical and military rules.

“With leadership committed to strategic cooperation and to managing competing interests”, he said, “we can steer the world onto a safer path”.

A political map of the Middle East by Central Intelligence Agency [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

A political map of the Middle East by Central Intelligence Agency [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

The imminent end of the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty – described by the Secretary-General as a “landmark agreement that helped stabilize Europe and end the Cold War”, means that the world will lose an “invaluable brake” on nuclear war.

States with nuclear arms capacity should, he continued, avoid destabilizing developments, and urgently seek a new path towards new international arms control measures. These include an extension of the so-called “New Start” agreement between the US and Russia; the 2020 Review of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.

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Climate ChangeOpinionSummerUN

Iftikhar Ali is a veteran Pakistani journalist, former president of UN Correspondents Association, and a recipient of the Pride of Performance civil award
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