Paris, France | AFP

Jim Skea insists the IPCC, the UN climate panel he chairs, is not in crisis and remains relevant despite criticism it is too slow in publishing its landmark scientific reports on climate change.

In an interview with AFP in Paris, the British sustainable energy professor addressed divisions within the IPCC, the US retreat on climate cooperation, and record-breaking global temperatures.

Hourglass with Earth inside with an glacier melting above - global warming concept (s. IPCC, climate)
Credit: user6702303 | Freepik

Interview

Q: At a recent meeting in Hangzhou, China, the IPCC failed to agree on a publication timeline for its next critical reports. Is the institution in crisis?

A: “No, I don’t think the IPCC is in crisis. We will resolve this issue about the timeline. I mean, we had a lot of big successes in Hangzhou… So IPCC is moving forward.

“On the timeline issue overall, there were two options that are basically on the floor there. One for a timeline that is aligned with the second global stocktake under the Paris Agreement (due in 2028) and another one which is slower.

“And for the countries that are proposing the slower timeline, there are another set of considerations. It’s about the time that’s available for countries to review the draft reports of IPCC and it’s about the time that’s available for people from developing countries to produce literature.

“So we need to get to the issue at the next meeting of IPCC, which should take place in the last quarter of this year. And I’m optimistic we will get a solution there and move forward.”

Q: The United States was absent from the meeting in China. Are you concerned?

A: “We don’t normally comment on who’s at a particular meeting until the reports come out. But, you know, it’s been widely reported that the US didn’t register for, or participate in, the meeting in Hangzhou, and that is indeed the case.

“At every meeting we have 60 or 70 countries or members of IPCC that don’t turn up for the meeting, don’t register. The US was one of these at this meeting, and it was a business as usual meeting. We got the job done. We got the outlines of the reports agreed.”

Q: IPCC reports take five to seven years, which some say is far too long. Is the IPCC still relevant?

A: “It’s manifestly relevant. The 1.5 (degrees Celsius) report in the last cycle just had an absolutely huge impact, globally, in terms of negotiations. And if you go along to every Conference of the Parties, you will find every delegation standing up and saying, we have to rely on the science and refer back to IPCC reports.

“So the absolute evidence there is that IPCC continues to be relevant. What we are not is a 24/7 news organisation because of these five to seven year cycles. We have a very elaborate process of review. It takes time to go through them.

“But when we produce our reports, they have the stamp of authority of the scientists and consensus among governments, and that makes them very powerful. And I think if we compromise our procedures, we would lose that authority.”

Q: Global temperature records have been broken in recent years, surprising even some scientists. Is global warming greater than predicted in climate models?

A: “There’s a lot of intense scientific work going on at the moment to try and understand, precisely, what’s happened over the last two to three years, and what explains things.

“The understanding I have, from talking to scientists — and just to say, I am not a physical climate scientist myself — my understanding is that we are at the boundary of exceptional circumstances for the global indicators. But for particular regions and for example, for ecosystems, we are also well beyond the boundaries of the expected range.

“So there’s a lot of work going on to try and understand that at the moment… We hope there will be enough literature to provide a better explanation when IPCC next reports, probably 2028 for the Working Group (1) Physical Science report.”

jmi/np/yad

© Agence France-Presse

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by Julien Mivielle | AFP
Featured image credit: maniacvector | Freepik

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