Our Response to Climate Change Is Missing Something Big, Scientists Say
Some environmental solutions are win-win, helping to rein in global warming and protecting , too. But others address one crisis at the expense of the other. Growing trees on grasslands, for example, can destroy the plant and animal life of a rich ecosystem, even if the new trees ultimately suck up carbon. What to do? Unless the world stops treating and biodiversity collapse as separate issues, neither problem can be addressed effectively, according to by researchers from two leading international scientific panels. These two topics are more deeply intertwined than originally thought, said Hans-Otto Portner, co-chairman of the scientific steering committee that produced the report. They are also inextricably tied to human well being. But global policies usually target one or the other, leading to unintended consequences. If you look at just one single angle, you miss a lot of things, said Yunne-Jai Shin, a marine biologist with the French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development and a co-author of the report. Every action counts For years, one set of scientists and policymakers has studied and tried to tackle the , warning the world of the dangers from greenhouse gases that have been building up in the atmosphere since the Industrial Revolution. The lead culprit: burning fossil fuels. Another group has studied and tried to tackle the biodiversity crisis, raising alarms about extinctions and ecosystem collapse. The lead culprits: habitat loss because of agriculture, and, at sea, overfishing. The two groups have operated largely in their own silos. But their subjects are connected by something elemental, literally: carbon itself. The same element that makes up heat-trapping carbon dioxide, methane and soot is also a fundamental building block of the natural world. It helps form the very tissue of plants and animals on earth. Its stored in forests, wetlands, grasslands and on the ocean floor. In fact, land and water ecosystems are already stashing away half of human-generated emissions. Another connection between climate and biodiversity: People have created emergencies on both fronts by using the planets resources in unsustainable ways. For the last couple of decades, the climate crisis has largely overshadowed the biodiversity crisis, perhaps because its threat seemed more dire. But the balance may be shifting. Scientists warn that declines in biodiversity can lead to ecosystem collapse, threatening humanitys food and water supply. Climate change of four or five degrees is just such an existential threat to people, its hard to imagine, said Paul Leadley, one of the authors and an ecologist at Paris-Saclay University. And, he continued, if we lose a really large fraction of species on earth, thats an existential threat. Businesses and countries have increasingly looked to nature as a way to offset their emissions, for example, by planting trees to absorb carbon. But the science is clear: Nature cant store enough carbon to let us keep on spewing greenhouse gases at our current rates. A clear first priority is emissions reductions, emissions reductions and emissions reductions Dr. Portner said. Just last month, the worlds that if the world wants to avoid the worst impacts of global warming, nations would need to stop approving new coal, oil and gas projects immediately. To make matters worse, some measures being used or proposed to address could devastate biodiversity. Some people are out there selling this message that if we cover the whole planet with trees, that will solve the climate problem, Dr. Leadley said. Thats a mistaken message on many levels. In Brazil, parts of the Cerrado, a biodiverse savanna that stores large amounts of carbon, have been planted with monocultures of eucalyptus and pine in an attempt to meet a global reforestation goal. The result, researchers have written separately, is an because they and the livelihoods of local communities, including Indigenous people. Europe once hoped to lead the world in they led to deforestation and increased food prices. Another kind of bioenergy, wood pellets, is currently , despite concerns about pollution and biodiversity loss. Climate interventions tend to hurt biodiversity more than the other way round, and some trade-offs must occur, the authors wrote. Solar farms, for example, eat up wildlife habitat, a particular concern for places with threatened species. But, critically, they generate clean energy. The report highlights ways to mitigate the damage to biodiversity, for example by grazing livestock around them, improving carbon soil stocks and avoiding intact habitat. Pollinator gardens on solar farms can help nurture insects and birds. While wind farms can hurt migrating birds, the authors note that modern turbines cause much less damage. By and nature, the report said, we can safeguard biodiversity, help limit warming, improve human well being and even find protection from the consequences of climate change, like intensified flooding and storms. In the Casamance region of Senegal, for example, and adopted sustainable fishing measures, improving their catch, bringing back dolphins and 20 species of fish, storing carbon and protecting their coastline, said Pamela McElwee, an environmental anthropologist at Rutgers University who was one of the authors. Mangroves are a really special type of ecosystem, she said, in that they do it all for humans. While mangroves are themselves vulnerable to climate change, Dr. McElwee said , because restoration efforts are working. In the Hindu Kush mountains of South Asia, a project has conserved an area about the size of Belgium, restoring high-altitude forests and rangelands and protecting threatened snow leopards and musk deer, the report says, while keeping carbon out of the atmosphere. The 1.3 million people who live there, straddling Nepal, India and the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, have seen enhanced household incomes through tourism and sustainable farming. Urban areas, too, can do their part with native trees, green spaces and coastal ecosystems, the researchers said. The report was the first collaboration between the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. , an environmental scientist at Harvard University and a former White House science adviser who was not involved in the report, called it a must-read for our time. Brad Plumer contributed reporting. reports on wildlife and extinction for the Climate desk. She has also worked on the Investigations desk, where she was part of the Times team that received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its reporting on sexual harassment.