The UK's chief scientist has said that both green technology and behavioural changes will be needed to tackle climate change
Tackling the climate crisis will require behavioural changes such as eating less meat and flying less, as well as green technology, the UK’s chief scientific adviser has said.
Patrick Vallance made the comments as he joined senior scientific advisers from around the world to issue a statement ahead of the COP26 climate talks, which begin on 31 October in Glasgow, UK. It called on leaders to take urgent action to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels – beyond which more severe impacts of global warming will be felt.
The statement, signed by nearly 40 chief scientists and equivalents, said it was still possible to curb temperature rises to 1.5°C, but only with steep reductions in global emissions by 2030 and reducing them to zero overall by 2050.
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The advisers said stabilising the climate would limit sea level rises and extreme weather events, improve prosperity and protect human health and nature.
They also said addressing climate change would require intense international collaboration on research and innovation to develop and deliver new solutions across all sectors of the global economy.
Action to adapt to the consequences of climate change that are already inevitable “is critical”, they warned.
The statement, released as leaders and negotiators head to Glasgow for the latest round of UN talks to tackle the climate crisis, said limiting warming “will require rapid, urgent and sustained action and significant behavioural, socioeconomic and technological transformations across the world”.
“This must begin with rapid scale-up and deployment of a wide range of existing and novel technological solutions,” it said.
Governments should focus on piloting and scaling up existing green technologies over the next decade, accelerate development of next-generation solutions and involve every part of society in the green transition, which must be affordable, accessible and fair, the advisers said.
Vallance said the message to world leaders is that “1.5°C is achievable, it’s absolutely what we should be aiming for”, but it requires action now. This is the decade of research and development of innovation, as it has to be scaled and applied now or the world won’t be able to reach the 1.5°C target, he said. “It’s going to require detailed plans, it’s going to require technology, it’s going to require behavioural change and it’s going to require monitoring in order to achieve this, including monitoring of emissions.”
On behavioural changes, Vallance said reductions in meat eating and flying would need to happen, adding that “there will be a move away from the extent of meat eating we’ve seen in the past, and I think we will all need to think about our flying habits”.
“But of course, coupled to that, there’s also technological advances, so as options for green transport become real, that will change again,” he said. “One of the climate challenges is, it’s a series of small things from all of us that turn into a big change. Those little things that appear like they’re not very much are important when they are aggregated across many many millions of people.”
Vallance said that most of the technologies needed to shift to a greener world are already “visible”, and warned against relying on a “magic new technology” coming along in future years that would solve the problem.
He added that the “green choice needs to be the easy choice”, including on price and convenience, and that people need a clear understanding of what they can do on an individual level to make a difference.
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