Labour need to get moving on zero carbon bill enactment
29th March 2019.
“The physical signs and socio-economic impacts of climate change are accelerating and Labour need to get moving on zero carbon bill enactment now.”
From Citizens Environmental Advocacy Centre In’c. (CEAC)
Our centre just received the alarming latest 29th March 2019 climate change report stating that ‘quote’ “The physical signs and socio-economic impacts of climate change are accelerating according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
Below we need to release the whole report to everyone here as it now urgently requires our Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as out ‘champion’ of ‘climate change’ to get the ‘zero carbon bill’ still held up finished now and enacted ASAP for all our future common good, health and wellbeing.
Latest NZ scientific climate change report
today 29th March 2019.
NZ P.M. Jacinda Ardern needs to
read this NZ scientific report released today.
Our NZ climate is now moving out of reach of changing it so this report from senior NZ scientists are warning the Labour coalition Government.
Ken
Crispin.
Secretary.
CEAC.
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/SC1903/S00049/global-state-of-the-cliate-2018-expert-reaction.htm
Sci-Tech
SCOOP
Global State of the Climate 2018 - Expert
Reaction
Friday, 29 March 2019, 9:17 am
Press Release:
Science Media Centre
The physical signs and
socio-economic impacts of climate change are accelerating
according to the World Meteorological Organization
(WMO).
In their 2018 State of the Global Climate report,
they say 2018 saw record sea level rise and exceptionally
high land and ocean temperatures over the past four years,
continuing the warming trend observed over the past two
decades.
The statement also covers climate impacts on
human populations over the past year, such as at climate
hazards, displacements and food security.
The SMC asked
experts to comment, feel free to use these comments in your
reporting.
Professor James Renwick, climate scientist and
Head of the VUW School of Geography, Environment and Earth
Sciences, comments:
"The 25th annual State of the Climate
report from the WMO is an excellent and accessible summary,
but it makes for sobering reading. Carbon dioxide
concentrations are at record levels, ocean heat content and
sea levels are both at record highs, sea ice extent is well
below normal in both hemisphere, glaciers and ice sheets are
melting. On and on in the now-familiar litany of all the
ways the climate is warming and changing around us. Even
more worrying is the range of associated extreme weather
events and impacts on human populations. World hunger is on
the rise and we are now talking of millions of people
displaced as a result of weather and climate
extremes.
"Ecosystems are being affected worldwide, on
land and in the oceans, where acidification is associated
with rising temperatures and loss of dissolved oxygen. The
record heat in New Zealand and the Tasman Sea during summer
2017/18 is an example of what we can expect much more of in
future years. With no action on climate change, that record
warm summer in New Zealand would be counted as a cold summer
in another 50 years. The associated increases in climate and
weather extremes would displace hundreds of millions and
would threaten the fabric of societies everywhere.
"The globe is currently running a temperature of about
1°C above pre-industrial levels. To rein in the warming at
no more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial, global emissions
need to halve by 2030, and go to zero by 2050. Yet,
emissions increased to record levels in 2018! Policy-makers
must really take on board that climate change is an
existential threat to global society, to the global economy,
and to all ecosystems on earth. I hope the planned United
Nations Climate Action Summit later this year really
galvanises action by governments around the world."
No
conflict of interest.
Gregor Macara, climate scientist,
National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA),
comments:
"In a week that has seen the highest 48-hour
rainfall total ever in New Zealand, it seems fitting that
the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is highlighting
the increasing impacts of climate change around the
world.
"New Zealand is far from immune and has
experienced many of the indicators the WMO has concluded are
becoming more pronounced globally.
"These include:
•
New Zealand’s hottest ever month in January 2018 when the
mean temperature was 20.3°C, a remarkable 3.1°C above
average
• At New Zealand climate stations over the past
six years, for every record or near-record low monthly mean
temperature there have been 12 record or near-record
highs.
• A hot March this year – higher temperatures
than what it’s usually like in mid to late summer.
•
Marine heatwaves over the past two summers – likely a
contributor to this week’s wettest 48 hours on
record.
• A near record 40-day dry spell in Nelson this
summer which included significant wildfires.
• 2018
coming in at NZ’s equal-second warmest year on record ."
[High-res graph available here under creative commons (CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0)].
No conflict of interest.
Professor Jim
Salinger, Visiting Scholar, Penn State University,
comments:
"The 25th Anniversary issue shows hastening
climate warming globally. This was true for the New Zealand
region, a combined land and marine area of 4 million sq. km
(the size of the Indian subcontinent), with the warmest year
on 150 years of land and sea records.
"It is very
alarming that the carbon dioxide levels reaching a highest
406 ppm – up from 280 ppm in the 19th century, and methane
jumping unexpectedly by 25 ppb to a record 1850 ppb by
2017.
"The extra 3.7 mm of sea level rise will be very
significant for the coast of Australia, and especially New
Zealand with its many seaside urban areas and long
coasts.
"The record warm summer ending in February 2019
produced the largest ice loss on the Southern Alps glaciers
since the regular end of summer snowline surveys started 42
years ago.
"We've seen Queensland Groper in the Bay of
Islands, Northland, 3000 km out of range, snapper in Milford
Sound in Fiordland, and massive mortality in the aquaculture
fisheries of the Marlborough Sounds. These are a harbinger
of climate in the latter part of the 20th century if we do
not take action to reduce emissions from the combustion of
fossil fuels and the production of greenhouse gases from
other sources such as waste and agriculture
immediately."
No conflict of
interest.
ends