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Explorers seek ancient Antarctica ice in climate change study
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India's Iyer discharged from hospital after lacerated spleen
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Serbia marks first anniversary of deadly train station collapse
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Latin America weathered Trump tariffs better than feared: regional bank chief
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Bangladesh dockers strike over foreign takeover of key port
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Tanzania president wins election landslide after deadly protests
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Sixers suffer first loss, Bulls stay perfect as NBA Cup opens
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Dodgers, Blue Jays gear up for winner-take-all World Series game seven
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Taiwan's new opposition leader against defence spending hike
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China to exempt some Nexperia chips from export ban
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Dodgers hold off Blue Jays 3-1 to force World Series game seven
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Crowns, beauty, fried chicken: Korean culture meets diplomacy at APEC
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Panama wins canal expansion arbitration against Spanish company
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Myanmar fireworks festival goers shun politics for tradition
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China to exempt some Nexperia orders from export ban
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Sixers suffer first loss as NBA Cup begins
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China's Xi to meet South Korean leader, capping APEC summit
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Japan's Chiba leads after Skate Canada short program
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Finland's crackdown on undocumented migrants sparks fear
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Climbers test limits at Yosemite, short-staffed by US shutdown
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Gstaad gives O'Brien record 21st Breeders' Cup win
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Sinner boosts number one bid in Paris, to face Zverev in semis
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Springer back in Toronto lineup as Blue Jays try to close out Dodgers
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Nationals make Butera MLB's youngest manager since 1972
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Guirassy lifts Dortmund past Augsburg ahead of Man City clash
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G7 says it's 'serious' about confronting China's critical mineral dominance
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NFL fines Ravens $100,000 over Jackson injury status report
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NBA refs to start using headsets on Saturday
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Trump says Christians in Nigeria face 'existential threat'
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French-Turkish actor Tcheky Karyo dies at 72
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Food stamps, the bulwark against hunger for over 40 mn Americans
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Trump keeps world guessing with shock nuclear test order
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Wall Street stocks rebound on Amazon, Apple earnings
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US Fed official backed rate pause because inflation 'too high'
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Prayers and anthems: welcome to the Trump-era Kennedy Center
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Swiss central bank profits boosted by gold price surge
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Sinner beats Shelton to boost number one bid in Paris
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French court jails Bulgarians for up to four years for Holocaust memorial defacement
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Profits dip at ExxonMobil, Chevron on lower crude prices
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Ashraf and Mirza skittle South Africa as Pakistan win 2nd T20
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2,000 trucks stuck in Belarus after Lithuania closes border: association
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French lawmakers reject wealth tax proposal in budget debate
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Premier League blames European expansion for lack of Boxing Day games
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Bublik sets up Auger-Aliassime semi-final at Paris Masters
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World's most expensive coffee goes on sale in Dubai at $1,000 a cup
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Trump stirs global tensions, confusion with nuclear test order
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Panic across US as health insurance costs set to surge
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Court eases ban on Russian lugers but Olympic hopes on thin ice
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England captain Itoje targets Autumn Nations clean sweep
Three decades ago world told to 'act now' on climate
With the planet facing the "potentially serious consequences" of global warming, UN experts writing 32 years ago urged an indifferent world to take immediate action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Planet-warming carbon pollution has increased ever since.
In 1990 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change produced the first trio of reports in a cycle of climate change assessments -- one on the physical science of warming, one on the impacts and one on solutions -- that has repeated roughly every six years.
While the authors of the most recent IPCC report on impacts, released in February this year, can say the evidence of harm to humanity and the entire planet is "unequivocal", the authors of those first reports 30 years ago could not be as forthright.
But they were clear that the risks were so high we couldn't afford to wait.
"The potentially serious consequences of climate change on the global environment," they said "give sufficient reasons to begin by adopting response strategies that can be justified immediately even in the face of such significant uncertainties".
They said cuts to the planet-warming gases that humans were pumping into the atmosphere should be swift and drastic.
"Because climate change could potentially result in significant impacts on the global environment and human activities, it is important to begin considering now what measures might be taken in response," the report said.
There was never an easy answer.
The scientists writing the 1990 report underscored the need to reduce emissions of different gases -- especially carbon dioxide and methane -- across a range of different sectors, from energy generation to agriculture.
"Our understanding has been refined over 40 years, but the alarm has been ringing since the first IPCC report," said Celine Guivarch, one of the authors of the latest IPCC assessment of solutions, set to be published on April 4.
With each new cycle of climate evaluation, the description of risks in the IPCC reports has become ever clearer and more urgent. The forecasts have become increasingly catastrophic.
Meanwhile, emissions have risen almost every year, only breaking their relentless pace because of major economic crises, such as the one triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic.
As a result, CO2 in the atmosphere has never been higher.
According to data from the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii, which has monitored the atmosphere for decades, C02 concentrations reached 416 parts per million in 2021, up from 354 ppm in 1990 when the first IPCC report was published.
Earth has experienced periods of much higher C02 concentrations in the distant past.
But in its report on the physical science released in August 2021, the IPCC said the rate the gas has increased in the atmosphere since 1900 "is at least 10 times faster than at any other time during the last 800,000 years".
"Current levels of atmospheric CO2 have not been experienced for at least two million years," it added.
Z.AlNajjar--SF-PST