There is a 1-in-10 chance of the world being 6C warmer than it is today by 2100 - a temperature rise that would lead to cataclysmic changes in the global climate with unimaginable consequences for human civilisation, leading climate researchers have warned.
The risk of hitting the highest upper estimate for global warming based on current levels of carbon dioxide emissions is now so high that it is equivalent to tolerating the risk of 10,000 fatal aircraft crashes a day, according to 17 "Earth League" scientists and economists who have signed a joint "Earth Statement" published yesterday.
The experts have drawn up a three-page summary of the action that needs to be agreed upon at the United Nations meeting in Paris this December, which is widely seen as the last chance for the world's political leaders to agree on a binding treaty to prevent the global climate from slipping into a dangerously precarious state. Their statement lists eight areas- an eight-point-plan - of action.
Scientists calculate that the world has already warmed by an average of about 0.85C over the past 120 years, and that a further increase of no more than 2C is the lowest that could be tolerated without running the risk of dangerous climate "tipping points" leading to further, accelerated warming.
"We should aim to stay as far below [2C] as possible, since even 2C warming will cause significant damage and disruption. However, we are currently on a path to around 4C warming by 2100, which would create unmanageable environmental challenges," it says.