Climate Change

New IPCC chief plays down climate change gloom: 1.5°C global warming would not destroy humanity

IPCC-global-warming

Photo: Pexels

Published

August 2, 2023

Country

Comments

comments icon

1

Share

Published:

August 2, 2023

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

1

Share

A global temperature rise of above 1.5°C would not spell the end of humanity, though it would make the world a more dangerous place, according to the newly appointed head of the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Jim Skea.

Surpassing the 1.5°C mark would lead to many problems and social tensions, but it would not constitute an existential threat to humanity, according to him.

Skea: Warnings of extinction “paralyze” people

Speaking to German media outlets, Skea said that warnings of extinction “paralyze” people, preventing them from taking the necessary steps to tackle climate change. People “should not despair and fall into a state of shock” if average global temperatures were to increase by 1.5°C, he was quoted as saying in an interview with Der Spiegel.

There are good reasons to be optimistic in the fight against climate change

He also claims that there are good reasons to be optimistic and that every measure aimed at weakening climate change helps. These measures, according to him, are becoming increasingly cost-effective.

Skea added that a short-term focus should remain on expanding renewable electricity to reduce emissions from fossil fuels.

Individual climate action alone is not enough

On individual climate action, the new IPCC chief says that it alone will not bring about the necessary change. That, he says, requires new infrastructure, because, for example, “people will not get on bikes if there are no cycle paths.”

Comments (1)
Ira Straus / August 3, 2023

Sad to see this kind of dissembling, explicitly motivated by a wish to have an ideological effect and get people to stick to the existing program. In reality the warming poses greatly increased dangers, and the only way to keep it below the threshold is to do sunlight deflection as well. We have to hope the new IPCC director is not ideologically resistant to doing that, and will not continue to obfuscate the need for stepping up the research and development on it..

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

world dnv energy transition energy transition outlook 2025

Policy changes in US will have marginal impact on global energy transition

09 October 2025 - AI energy use may seem alarming, but it is projected to stay below EV charging and the cooling of buildings, DNV calculated

slovenia climate change fund sustainable mobility

Slovenia allocates EUR 375 million for sustainable mobility

03 October 2025 - Slovenia has allocated EUR 835 million from the Climate Fund for climate change mitigation and adaptation

Europe’s Environment 2025 report

Europe’s Environment 2025 report: Not good

30 September 2025 - ​Europe’s Environment 2025 is the most comprehensive analysis on the current state and outlook for the continent’s environment, climate, and sustainability, building on data from across 38 countries, according to the European Environment Agency

EU opens energy environment cluster accession talks Albania

EU opens energy, environment cluster in accession talks with Albania

17 September 2025 - Albania started negotiations with the European Union on the so-called cluster 4, encompassing the green agenda and sustainable connectivity