There is no silver bullet, but a mosaic of actions—from ramping up solar and wind technology to economy-wide energy efficiencies—were identified by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) as low hanging fruit
Not only do we have the tools to slash emissions and curb global warming by 2030, but half of available carbon-cutting options are cost-free or very cheap, UN climate experts say.
There is no silver bullet, but a mosaic of actions — from ramping up solar and wind technology, to economy-wide energy efficiencies — were identified by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) as low hanging fruit.
The IPCC said humanity has less than three years to halt the rise of planet-warming carbon emissions, and less than a decade to slash them by 43 percent from 2019 levels to give us a shot at capping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius.
But current policies support continued fossil fuel use and are taking the world in the wrong direction, the IPCC said, in a flagship report on how to avoid catastrophic warming, published on Monday.
Despite the tight timeline, the IPCC said the existing carbon-cutting potential across sectors "is sufficient to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions to half of the current level or less".