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1.5°c – dead or alive? the risks to transformational change from reaching and breaching the Paris agreement goal

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: London Institute for Public Policy Research 2023Description: 26pSubject(s): Online resources: Summary: The historical failure to sufficiently tackle the climate and ecological crisis could create consequences that challenge the ability of societies to tackle the root causes of this crisis. This is a doom loop: the consequences of the crisis and the failure to address it draw focus and resources from tackling its causes. The study described this as a ‘strategic risk’ to our collective ability to realise a transformation of societies that ultimately avoids catastrophic climate and ecological change. This dangerous dynamic extends to how prospects for tackling the climate and ecological crisis are framed. It explored a key example: the growing debate over whether it is now inevitable that global heating will breach the international agreed goal of 1.5°C. A systematic effort is needed to tackle threats and grasp opportunities for rapid environmental action thrown up by the deepening consequences of the crisis: to make the green transition itself more resilient. Otherwise, the world could head further into a spiral of accelerating environmental shocks and counterproductive, defensive reactions.
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The historical failure to sufficiently tackle the climate and ecological crisis could create consequences that challenge the ability of societies to tackle the root causes of this crisis. This is a doom loop: the consequences of the crisis and the failure to address it draw focus and resources from tackling its causes. The study described this as a ‘strategic risk’ to our collective ability to realise a transformation of societies that ultimately avoids catastrophic climate and ecological change. This dangerous dynamic extends to how prospects for tackling the climate and ecological crisis are framed. It explored a key example: the growing debate over whether it is now inevitable that global heating will breach the international agreed goal of 1.5°C. A systematic effort is needed to tackle threats and grasp opportunities for rapid environmental action thrown up by the deepening consequences of the crisis: to make the green transition itself more resilient. Otherwise, the world could head further into a spiral of accelerating environmental shocks and counterproductive, defensive reactions.

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