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SIX TRANSFORMATIONS
NEEDED TO ACHIEVE THE SDGS:
MAJOR REPORT LAUNCHED
INDIA NOT ON TRACK FOR 2030
CHILD MORTALITY TARGETS
PARIS CLIMATE TARGETS
COULD BE EXCEEDED
SOONER THAN EXPECTED
The World in 2050 initiative
launched a report at the UN
High-level Political Forum,
Transformations to Achieve the
Sustainable Development Goals,
setting out six transformations
that will enable humanity
to meet the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs).
They encompass demography,
consumption and production,
decarbonization and
energy, food, biosphere and
water, cities, and the digital
revolution.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/TWI2050-18
Almost half of the districts
in India are not on track to
reduce the mortality rates of
newborns and meet the target
set out under Sustainable
Development Goal 3 for 2030,
while a third will not meet
the target for under-five
mortality rates, according to
IIASA research. India still has
the world’s highest number of
child deaths, and states must
do more.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/child-mortality-18
A new study led by IIASA
researcher Thomas Gasser
has for the first time
comprehensively accounted
for permafrost carbon release
when estimating emission
budgets for climate targets.
The results show that the
world might be closer to
exceeding the budget for
the long-term target of the
Paris climate agreement than
previously thought.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/Permafrost-18
News
in brief
Written by: Helen Tunnicliffe
Climate taxes on agriculture could
lead to more food insecurity than
climate change itself
New IIASA-led research has found that a single climate mitigation scheme
applied to all sectors in the form of a global carbon tax could result in more
widespread hunger and food insecurity than the direct impacts of climate
change. Smarter, inclusive policies are necessary instead.
The researchers, led by Tomoko Hasegawa, a researcher at IIASA and
Japan’s National Institute for Environment Studies, and Shinichiro Fujimori,
an IIASA researcher and associate professor at Kyoto University, summarized
outputs of eight global economic models, including GLOBIOM, to analyze
various scenarios to 2050.
The models suggest that by 2050 climate change could be responsible for
putting on average an extra 24 million people at risk of hunger. However,
if agriculture were included in very stringent climate mitigation schemes,
such as a global carbon tax or a comprehensive emissions trading system
applying the same rules to all sectors, the increase in food prices would be
such that an average of 78 million more people would be at risk of hunger.
Some models put the figure as high as 170 million.
The researchers stress that their results should not be used to argue
against vital emissions reduction efforts. Instead, the research shows the
importance of “smart” targeted policy design, particularly in agriculture.
Policymakers must scrutinize other factors more closely, rather than
focusing only on the goal of reducing emissions.
The researchers suggest, among others, schemes encouraging more
productive and resilient agricultural systems and complementary policies
to counteract the impact of mitigation policies on vulnerable regions. For
example, money raised from carbon taxes could be used for food aid programs.
Further info: Hasegawa T, Fujimori S, HavlĂk P, Valin H, Bodirsky BL, Doelman JC,
Fellmann T, Kyle P et al. (2018). Risk of increased food insecurity under stringent global
climate change mitigation policy. Nature Climate Change [pure.iiasa.ac.at/15389]
Tomoko Hasegawa: hasegawa@iiasa.ac.at
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Volume winter 2018/2019
- Title
- options
- Volume
- winter 2018/2019
- Location
- Laxenburg
- Date
- 2018
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 32
- Categories
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine