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HomeNewsOpinionThe 1.5-degree breach is a serious warning on the climate front

The 1.5-degree breach is a serious warning on the climate front

Halting or reversing the temperature rise through massive emission reduction appears to be a mirage that the global community is chasing with little success. Therefore, countries prone to extreme weather events need to take proactive action to adapt and minimise their impacts. This can be achieved through constant monitoring and evidence-based policy actions 

February 09, 2024 / 09:58 IST
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Indian researchers clearly establish that India is already witnessing the impacts of climate change caused due to excessive emissions of atmospheric carbon and other greenhouse gases.

Many parts of North India are experiencing an extended spell of cold weather. Yet January 2024 in Jammu and Kashmir was the warmest in the past four decades and snowfall was not reported from popular tourist destinations for most of the December-January season. Dry weather significantly delayed snowfall in Auli, Mussoorie and other towns in Uttarakhand as well.

The trend is global. January 2024 has emerged as the hottest January on record, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. For the first time, the global mean temperature for 12 months has exceeded 1.5 degrees above the pre-industrial levels. It is a significant landmark since this was the level the rise above which could witness spiralling impacts of climate change. The new high comes on top of 2023 having been ranked as the hottest year globally since 1850. In India, 2023 was the second warmest year since 1901, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).

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Temperature, rainfall, snowfall and other weather events are a result of dynamic processes and their occurrence at the local level is dictated by a multitude of local, regional and global meteorological factors. Climate scientists study such events on a long-term scale to arrive at certain patterns and tell us if they are related to anthropogenic (man-made) climate change. Numerous studies and reports published by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have assessed evidence and have pointed to the connection between changing weather patterns globally with climate change.

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