The war-inspired natural gas boom is undermining already insufficient efforts to limit future warming to just a few more tenths of a degree, a new report says.
Planning and build-up of liquified and other natural gas — because of an energy crisis triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — would add 2 billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (1.9 billion metric tons) a year to the air by 2030, according to a report released on Thursday by Climate Action Tracker at international climate talks in Egypt.
That’s enough greenhouse gas to “hinder if not catastrophically hinder chances of achieving 1.5 degrees” Celsius since pre-industrial times, the international warming-limiting goal, said climate scientist Bill Hare, chief executive officer of Climate Analytics, one of the groups behind Climate Action Tracker, which monitors and analyses climate promises and action.
The world has already warmed 1.1C to 1.2C since pre-industrial times, leaving little room to keep below the 1.5C limit set in Paris in 2015.
The sheer amount of liquified natural gas projects in the pipeline for construction shocked the analysts, Hare said. The report calculates if everything planned goes through, the build-up would produce five times the amount of gas it is supposed to replace from Russia.