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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Brazil FM says 'climatism' a bid to restrict sovereignty
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 11, 2019

Climate change skeptic advisor to Trump quits
Washington (AFP) Sept 11, 2019 - A scientific advisor to President Donald Trump who argues that the overwhelming consensus on global warming is false has stepped down at the White House, officials said Wednesday.

William Happer, deputy assistant for emerging technology on the National Security Council, "is returning to academia," a spokesman for the NSC said.

"We wish him well and thank him for his tireless efforts to ensure that the Trump Administration's policies and decision-making were based on transparent and defensible science," the spokesman told AFP.

Happer's departure was announced a day after one of his supporters, national security advisor John Bolton, was fired by Trump.

Happer espouses a widely discredited theory that burning fossil fuels is good for the planet, rather than contributing to greenhouse gases that cause global warming.

He also called the concept of a tipping point, where the planet reaches irreversible warming tendencies, "propaganda" and for the "scientifically illiterate."

Trump is an outspoken proponent of fossil fuels and regularly touts surging US oil and gas production during his reelection campaign speeches.

Trump also pulled the United States out of the 2015 international Paris climate accord on collective measures to curb activities that contribute to warming.

Brazil's foreign minister charged Wednesday that international efforts to fight climate change amounted to a plot to destroy national sovereignty as his country faces intense criticism over Amazon fires.

Ahead of a major UN summit later this month aimed at stemming global warming, Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo attacked what he called an ideology of "climatism" during a visit to Washington.

"From the debate that's going on, it would seem that the world is ending, and that's the whole point of climatism," he said at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.

"The conveyers of that ideology want to create a moral equivalent of war in order to impose policies and restrictions that run counter to fundamental liberties," he said.

"How can someone in a time of peace dream of breaking the sovereignty of a country like Brazil over its own territory, saying 'the Amazon is on fire, again'? Because of ideology, because of the primeval cry of climate crisis, 'Let's save the planet,'" he said.

Araujo, an outspoken career diplomat fond of literary references who was tapped as foreign minister by far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, accepted that climate change was happening.

But he cast doubt on the overwhelming consensus of scientists that human activity is causing warming temperatures and downplayed the impact of Brazil's fires, which he said were in line with annual damage.

Bolsonaro, an avowed friend of industry and foe of environmentalists, has faced international criticism that his policies have worsened the fires in the Amazon, the world's largest rainforest, which is vital in soaking up carbon emissions behind climate change.

French President Emmanuel Macron has raised the idea of giving an international status to the Amazon and European leaders have warned that a trade pact with South America was at risk.

Bolsonaro hit back that Macron had a "colonialist mentality."

A global commission led by former UN chief Ban Ki-moon warned Tuesday that more than 100 million people in developing countries could be pushed below the poverty line without action on climate change by 2030.

EU sees US being swayed by its climate change 'example'
Brussels (AFP) Sept 11, 2019 - Europe believes the United States will end up following its lead in fighting climate change once it sees the economic benefits that carbon-cutting can bring, EU officials said Wednesday.

This incentive will be stressed at a UN Climate Change Summit two weeks from now at the United Nations in New York, when parties to the 2015 Paris climate agreement will talk up its implementation despite Washington's withdrawal from the pact under President Donald Trump.

The US exit is "a pity... that makes the fight against climate change much more difficult," European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic said, adding however that the European Union could "lead by example."

To do that, he told a news conference, the bloc must "develop not only the political or environmental narrative but also the economic one: To be green pays off. To go clean it brings you dividends. To go for clean tech brings you more jobs."

He added: "I think we have all the good figures to support this."

The argument is aimed not only at Trump, who has prioritised the US economy above environmental concerns, but other leaders too, Sefcovic said.

It is also hoped the policy could spur greater action from China which, though it invests heavily in renewable energy, remains deeply dependent on burning fossil fuels to keep its giant economy growing.

"China is still peaking emissions, and will not peak until 2030," said the EU commissioner for energy and climate action, Miguel Arias Canete, adding: "This is a global effort, otherwise we will not be able to stop global warming."

Together, China and the United States account for nearly half the planet's carbon emissions, making them the key countries needed to get behind urgent efforts to battle climate change.

For the EU the issue has been thrown into stark relief over the past five years.

Growing public concern was expressed in recent European parliamentary elections in which green parties did well.

The new European Commission to take charge in November has made it one of its top priorities.

It plans to boost its climate change fight by aiming for carbon neutrality across the bloc by 2050. And it has pledged to plough a quarter of its 1.3 trillion euro ($1.4 trillion) budget plan for 2021-27 into climate mitigation efforts.


Related Links
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
World must adapt to 'inevitable' climate change, warns report
Paris (AFP) Sept 10, 2019
Nations rich and poor must invest now to protect against the effects of climate change or pay an even heavier price later, a global commission warned Tuesday. Spending $1.8 trillion across five key areas over the next decade would not only help buffer the worst impacts of global warming but could generate more than $7 trillion in net benefits, the report from the Global Commission on Adaptation argued. "We are the last generation that can change the course of climate change, and we are the first ... read more

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