- Biden says Trump economic plan will be 'disaster'
- Trump's tariff plans may 'derail' US inflation progress: Yellen
- NFL star Burrow suffers home break-in while winning at Dallas
- Tiger and Charlie Woods set to compete in next week's PNC
- New York appeals dismissed PepsiCo plastic pollution suit
- Assad exit puts US at perilous crossroads in Syria
- King, Seales shine as West Indies cruise past Bangladesh
- Missile strike on Ukraine clinic kills at least four
- Celtic held to goalless stalemate at Dinamo Zagreb in Champions League
- Flick urges Barcelona to return to 'unstoppable' best against Dortmund
- Liverpool close on Champions League progress as Salah seals Girona win
- US offers $10 mn reward for wanted Chinese hacker
- Thousands told to flee as wildfire tears through Malibu
- Georgia protests enter 13th night as EU threatens 'measures'
- US disburses $20 bn Ukraine loan backed by profits from Russian assets
- Sink to source: Arctic is now emitting more carbon than it absorbs
- Israel assuming 'worst-case scenario' with Syria bombing: analysts
- Arteta grapples with defensive injury crisis ahead of Monaco clash
- French actor outraged as director denies child abuse in court
- NY gunman had manifesto railing against health insurance: police
- Wildfire quickly spreads in California's Malibu
- Airlines chief says jet manufacturers need to deliver
- Ancient marble statue found during Greek road works
- S.Korea ex-defence minister formally arrested for insurrection
- Boeing resumes production at Seattle plants after strike
- Germany's Scholz calls for Europe EV subsidy plan
- Romero points finger at Spurs chiefs for lack of investment
- Argentine court drops rape case against French rugby players
- World stock markets mixed as rate calls loom, geopolitics weighs
- Assad's feared dungeons give up their secrets
- US firms up $6.2 bn Micron funding to boost chipmaking
- Pogacar to defend Tour de France and world title as 2025 programme unveiled
- UK pledges to cut government spending waste
- Nobel Peace Prize winner Hidankyo calls for a world without nukes
- FIFA to confirm 2030 World Cup hosts and hand Saudi 2034 tournament
- Air passenger numbers to top five billion in 2025: IATA
- Fiorentina's Bove has defibrillator installed after collapse: media
- Dortmund coach Sahin warns of 'unbearable' fixture list
- Brazil's Lula undergoes surgery for brain hemorrhage
- Pentagon chief slams China's 'coercive behaviour'
- Stellantis, Chinese firm CATL plan $4bn battery plant in Spain
- Award-winning US poet Nikki Giovanni dies aged 81
- Fine particle pollution blamed for nearly 240,000 EU deaths in 2022
- Israel's PM Netanyahu in court to testify in corruption trial
- The Taiwan Strait: crucial waterway and military flashpoint
- France's Macron to host party leaders in quest for new govt
- Morocco sets stage for 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal
- Transylvania's last Saxons revive its stunning ghost villages
- DR Congo strives to reconcile young people with books
- Iceland wants immigrants to learn the language
RBGPF | -1.99% | 59.32 | $ | |
NGG | -1.05% | 60.94 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.2% | 24.62 | $ | |
RELX | 0.19% | 47.07 | $ | |
SCS | -2.28% | 13.16 | $ | |
AZN | -2.08% | 67.18 | $ | |
RIO | -0.11% | 64.82 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.12% | 24.39 | $ | |
BTI | -0.34% | 37.73 | $ | |
BCC | -2.03% | 142.43 | $ | |
RYCEF | -3.06% | 7.18 | $ | |
GSK | -2.22% | 35.21 | $ | |
BP | 0.03% | 30.1 | $ | |
JRI | -0.83% | 13.31 | $ | |
VOD | -0.9% | 8.84 | $ | |
BCE | -1.66% | 26.46 | $ |
Fly less? Go vegan? How people can take climate action
Individuals along with economy-wide efficiencies can make a major difference in the drive to avert the worst of global warming, UN climate experts say, estimating that sharp cuts to demand for energy-guzzling services could slash emissions up to 70 percent by 2050.
Avoiding airplanes, eating less meat, insulating your home could all make a dent, particularly when broad swathes of societies embrace change, says the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
While research often focuses on cutting emissions in the supply of goods and services -- energy generation, transport, agriculture, construction -- the IPCC has for the first time dedicated a whole chapter of its climate solutions report to the demand that drives these industries.
"Having the right policies, infrastructure and technology in place to enable changes to our lifestyles and behaviours can result in a 40-70 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050," said Priyadarshi Shukla co-chair of IPCC working group that produced the 3,000 page report.
But where can "this untapped potential", as Shukla calls it, be found?
- Day-to-day choices -
"Avoid, shift, improve" -- these are the key ways to curb demand, the report says.
You can avoid energy-intensive behaviour, switch to low-carbon technologies and improve the efficiency of existing tech.
In general, there are plenty of opportunities for improvement in the ways people travel from point A to point B.
You can change an internal combustion engine car to an electric one ("improve"), or even "shift" your daily commute to cycling or walking.
The biggest potential for avoidance is reducing long-haul flights. If people took fewer long distance flights and took the train where possible, overall aviation emissions could be reduced by 10 to 40 percent by 2040.
Meanwhile, increasing energy efficiency in homes and other buildings takes first place in the "improve" category.
And the most important "shift" you can make is to adopt a plant-based diet. But becoming a vegetarian or even vegan would have less of an emissions impact than cutting out one long-haul flight a year.
The report also highlights the need to reduce all types of waste, from energy or food for example.
"Choosing low-carbon options, such as car-free living, plant-based diets without or very little animal products, low-carbon sources of electricity and heating at home as well as local holiday plans," can reduce an individual's carbon footprint by up to nine tonnes of CO2 equivalent, says the IPCC.
- Unequal -
Most people in the world never take long-haul flights in the first place and do not have access to nutritious food.
Billions of people have a carbon footprint far below nine tonnes of CO2 equivalent.
For example, the average carbon footprint per inhabitant in Afghanistan is less than one tonne, according to the report, while in most western developed nations it is well over 10 tonnes.
And within countries there can also be an enormous split between the lavish energy consumption of the rich and the meagre carbon footprint of poorer people.
In fact, about half of the world's emissions can be attributed to the consumption of the richest 10 percent of the global population, the report said.
At the bottom of the wealth pyramid, the poorest half of the world contributes around 10 percent of consumption emissions.
"Wealthy individuals contribute disproportionately to higher emissions and have a high potential for emissions reductions while maintaining decent living standards and well-being," the report said.
- Beyond behaviour -
The responsibility for transforming the world's energy use and economic system to deal with climate change cannot be borne on the shoulders of individuals alone, the report stresses.
While people can make a difference with their lifestyle choices, the IPCC says transformative change involves more than just individuals' consumption choices.
There also need to be shifts in culture and social norms, business investment, political drivers from institutions, and changes in infrastructure.
H.Portela--PC