Transcript Slide 1

NZ’s role in contributing to international efforts to deal with Climate Change
Comments at the MFAT exchange of views, Wellington, August 16, 2007
Professor Peter Barrett
Victoria University of Wellington
Tel 04) 463 5336 E-mail: [email protected]
•
The IPCC has been reporting with increasing confidence for almost 2 decades that the
consequences of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, mostly burning fossil fuels
and land use changes, are changing climate, and scientific reports from the last 18
months suggest some effects like melting ice and rising sea level are proceeding more
rapidly than previously predicted
•
IPCC temperature projections to 2100 (see graph) indicate even if substantial progress is
made in reducing greenhouse gas emissions average global temperature is still likely to
rise more than 2°C above pre-industrial temperatures, widely regarded as “dangerous”
for the warmer and more energetic climate it will bring. Indeed greenhouse gas levels are
already approaching the 450 ppm CO2equivalent that will lead to this temperature once the
full effects are realised.
•
NZ’s is better placed to cope with global warming on account of its small size and
location (mid-latitude, surrounded by ocean - see satellite image). We also have more
energy alternatives and technology options than most, making it easier for us to reduce
our carbon footprint to near sustainable levels (ie from the present 3-4 tonnes of carbon
per person per year to less than 1 tonne per person per year)
•
These circumstances provide NZ with an opportunity and a moral responsibility to show
the rest of the world how a “carbon-neutral” society can be developed.
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This will require an unprecedented degree of collaboration throughout NZ society for
developing policy options that can be effective in achieving the dramatic reductions in
greenhouse gas levels per person that will be essential world wide to provide a lasting
solution to the climate change problem.
greenhouse gas levels for year 2000
held constant
NASA’s Hansen says we have 10 years left
“dangerous” GHG level
(Exeter meeting 2005)
+2°C ~450 ppm CO2e
IPCC 2007
“pre-industrial”
Earth Population 6 billion
IPCC 1990
Earth population 3 billion
From IPCC 2007 Fig SPM-7
• Science clear that climate now changing
faster than predicted
• Triple problem of “built in” CC,
economic/social response time and peak
oil
• NZ better placed for survival than almost
any other nation
• Moral responsibility to lead by example
• More collaboration needed