Europe space chief warns over political wavering on climate
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[August 16, 2023]
By Tim Hepher
PARIS (Reuters) - Europe's top space official has urged wavering
politicians not to abandon European leadership in combating climate
change, saying record heatwaves and vegetation fires provide "really
alarming" evidence of the pace of global warming.
"It is clear that climate change is very visible and is really causing
enormous changes to our planet," Josef Aschbacher, director general of
the European Space Agency and a leading expert on environmental
observation, told Reuters.
Greece, Italy, Spain and most recently Portugal have grappled with
record-breaking temperatures and wildfires this summer.
The World Meterological Organization said July had the highest global
average temperature for any month on record.
"This is really alarming," Aschbacher said. "It just confirms that
climate change is the biggest threat to our planet, to humankind, and
will remain so for the next decades and we do need to do everything we
can to mitigate the effects."
Until 2021, when he stepped up to run the 22-nation agency, Aschbacher
ran ESA's flagship Earth observation satellite activities including
Copernicus, which the Paris-based agency says is the world's largest
environmental monitoring effort.
ESA last week released a Copernicus image of a wildfire that razed
thousands of hectares of forest in southern Portugal - a blaze that has
since been brought under control.
Scientists say climate change is making heatwaves more frequent, intense
and likely to happen across seasons, not just in what were regarded as
the summer months.
But pressure is growing on some governments over the cost of net-zero
commitments on emissions, and analysts say looming elections in Europe
could put future measures at risk.
In Britain, where general elections are scheduled within 18 months,
Prime Mininster Rishi Sunak has warned of climate policies that
"unnecessarily give people more hassle and more costs".
Ashbacher said long-term costs were likely to be far higher unless
governments respond to "crystal clear" evidence, including satellite
measurements, of the recent heat emergency in southern Europe.
"Acting now is much cheaper than waiting for years and then patching up
the damage that has been caused," he said when asked if he saw any signs
of drift in Europe's climate agenda.
"So yes, the alarm bells should still be ringing very loud. And it is
certainly concerning if the signals are not heard in politics as they
should be heard, in order to really save our planet." He did not single
out specific politicians or states.
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A satellite image, captured by the
Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellite mission, shows a wildfire that broke
out on August 5 south of Odemira in the Alentejo region in southern
Portugal, as seen on August 7, 2023. The European Space Agency
/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
FUNDING GAP AND 'GLOBAL BOILING'
Aschbacher is among the most senior climate-monitoring officials to
voice concerns over wavering support for measures to combat climate
change - a creeping negative reaction that some climate activists
have labeled "greenlash".
After scientists declared July the world's hottest month on record,
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said "the era of global
boiling has arrived".
ESA's Copernicus program involves six families of Sentinel
satellites designed to read the planet's "vital signs" from carbon
dioxide to wave height or land and ocean temperatures.
Plans for six more "Sentinel Expansion" missions starting from 2026
are in flux because of a funding gap of 721 million euros ($787.84
million), stemming mainly from the partial loss of UK contributions
following its exit from the European Union.
Negotiations have been under way for months between Britain and the
European Commission over whether and to what extent Britain should
continue to contribute funds to Copernicus via the EU, which
co-leads the satellite program alongside ESA.
Britain's smaller direct contribution to Copernicus as one of the
core member nations of ESA itself is unaffected.
Britain's Department for Science, Innovation and Technology did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
Although it is not part of the talks, Aschbacher said ESA needs a
funding decision by June 2024 "to continue development of the next
set of Sentinel satellites in an uninterrupted way".
Failure to meet that deadline would kick the funding decision into
the next planning period from 2028, Aschbacher said. Suspending work
on the next round of satellites would also drive up costs by
damaging continuity and send the wrong message about Europe's
leadership on climate issues, he said.
"The impact would be very significant because the Sentinels are
required in order to provide a number of critical climate
parameters. This would significantly impact Europe’s commitment to
combating climate change."
($1 = 0.9152 euros)
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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