UN chief says drop in emissions from virus will not solve climate crisis

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UNITED NATIONS, United States, March 11, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres warned Tuesday that while the global outbreak of
coronavirus may have caused a temporary drop in emissions that cause global
warming, it would not end the problem and might even divert attention from
the fight.

“We should not overestimate the fact that emissions have been reduced for
some months. We will not fight climate change with the virus,” he said.

“It is important that all the attention that needs to be given to fight
this disease does not distract us from the need to defeat climate change,” he
said.

Guterres was speaking after the publication of a UN report on planetary
warming last year, and said the situation demanded urgent action.

“Global heating is accelerating,” he said as the World Meteorological
Organization (WMO), a UN institution, presented its update.

The WMO report confirmed findings in December that 2019 was the second
hottest year on record, “with the past decade the hottest in human history,”
Guterres said.

“We have no time to lose if we are to avert climate catastrophe,” Guterres
emphasized. “Let us have no illusions. Climate change is already causing
calamity, and more is to come.”

The WMO report looked at different aspects of climate change, from the
accelerating sea level rise due to melting ice to changes in land and marine
ecosystems.

The planet will continue to warm up if greenhouse gases continue to
increase, said WMO Secretary General Petteri Taalas.

“We just had the warmest January on record. Winter was unseasonably mild
in many parts of the northern hemisphere,” Taalas said.

“Smoke and pollutants from damaging fires in Australia circumnavigated the
globe, causing a spike in CO2 emissions,” he said.

“This is exposing coastal areas and islands to a greater risk of flooding
and the submersion of low-lying areas.”

Manuel Pulgar-Vidal with the World Wide Fund for Nature agreed with the
urgent demand for action.

“We are in a critical year for action — the longer we wait, the harder the
challenge of addressing the climate crisis is going to get,” he said in a
statement.

Guterres said that while both the coronavirus and climate change needed a
concerted international effort to counter, the two challenges were very
different.

“One is a disease that we all expect to be temporary and its impact we
also expect to be temporary,” he said. “The other is climate change which has
been there for many years and which will remain with us for decades and
require constant action.”