×
Home National Politics Business Bangladesh International Sports Entertainment Law & Justice More News Capital News Health Features Business Icon Technology Media Features Economy Education Literature Quran & Hadish Photo Gallery Editorial Religion Tours & Travels Tourism Guide Editors Corner Campus Youth Popular Organizations Country Wide Life Style Jobs Prism Notice History & Culture Messages Op-ed Wildlife Activities Foreign relation Accident Environment Asia Videoes Analysis Energy Book Reviews Literature Others KSA Arab World Cricket Football More Banking Corporate Global economy Real Estate Entrepreneur Start-up Telecom Summit Travel Art and Culture Food Book Fourth Estate View Letters to Editor Political Icon Diplomat Scholarship Career Job

Saturday 2nd of November 2024 E-paper
* Young generation will lead Bangladesh: Nahid Islam   * Chief Adviser urges Australia to increase regular migration from Bangladesh   * Severe Brahmaputra erosion leaves hundreds homeless in Kurigram   * US to assist Bangladesh to bring stolen money back: envoy   * 7 colleges to remain under DU with separate arrangement   * Students torch Jatiya Party HQ following attack on rally   * Israeli strikes kill 19 people including 8 women   * 91% budget hike for RNPP telecom project, less than 1% completion   * Australia launches plan to build long-range guided missiles   * Nur denies alliance between Gono Odhikar Parishad and BNP  
   Environment
  Climate`s `Catch-22`: Cutting pollution heats up the planet

Reuters

Air pollution, a global scourge that kills millions of people a year, is shielding us from the full force of the sun. Getting rid of it will accelerate climate change.

That`s the unpalatable conclusion reached by scientists poring over the results of China`s decade-long and highly effective "war on pollution", according to six leading climate experts.

The drive to banish pollution, caused mainly by sulphur dioxide (SO2) spewed from coal plants, has cut SO2 emissions by close to 90% and saved hundreds of thousands of lives, Chinese official data and health studies show.

Yet stripped of its toxic shield, which scatters and reflects solar radiation, China`s average temperatures have gone up by 0.7 degrees Celsius since 2014, triggering fiercer heatwaves, according to a Reuters review of meteorological data and the scientists interviewed.

"It`s this Catch-22," said Patricia Quinn, an atmospheric chemist at the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), speaking about cleaning up sulphur pollution globally. "We want to clean up our air for air quality purposes but, by doing that, we`re increasing warming."


The removal of the air pollution - a term scientists call "unmasking" - may have had a greater effect on temperatures in some industrial Chinese cities over the last decade than the warming from greenhouse gases themselves, the scientists said.

Other highly polluted parts of the world, such as India and the Middle East, would see similar jumps in warming if they follow China`s lead in cleaning the skies of sulphur dioxide and the polluting aerosols it forms, the experts warned.

They said efforts to improve air quality could actually push the world into catastrophic warming scenarios and irreversible impacts.

"Aerosols are masking one-third of the heating of the planet," said Paulo Artaxo, an environmental physicist and lead author of the chapter on short-lived climate pollutants in the most recent round of reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), completed this year.



  
Share Button
  

    
MDBs` global climate finance hit record in 2023
.............................................................................................
UN sounds `Red Alert` as world smashes heat records in 2023
.............................................................................................
California snow storm closes highway, threatens avalanches
.............................................................................................
New species of Amazon anaconda, world`s largest snake, discovered
.............................................................................................
Global energy-related CO2 emissions hit record high in 2023:IEA
.............................................................................................
Bird flu reaches mainland Antarctica for first time, scientists say
.............................................................................................
Deadly California storm triggers flooding, mudslides, power outages
.............................................................................................
Forest fires kill 123 in Chile`s worst disaster since 2010 earthquake
.............................................................................................
Australia sweats in heatwave, lifting bushfire risk amid El Nino
.............................................................................................
Asian power generation gets cleaner, even as coal emissions rise
.............................................................................................
Air conditioning companies’ sustainable designs face high costs
.............................................................................................
Global fossil fuel production plans far exceed climate targets, UN says
.............................................................................................
Climate`s `Catch-22`: Cutting pollution heats up the planet
.............................................................................................
World far off track on pledges to end deforestation by 2030
.............................................................................................
Three listed Chinese firms used endangered animal parts as ingredients
.............................................................................................
Coal industry faces 1 million job losses from global energy transition
.............................................................................................
A report by the United States Research Institute Dhaka ranks 5th in 10-year average air pollution
.............................................................................................
1500 brick kiln fear of burning wood
.............................................................................................
Asia, Africa bear brunt of pollution health burden: research
.............................................................................................
No quick fix to reverse Antarctic sea ice loss as warming intensifies
.............................................................................................
World battles to loosen China`s grip on vital rare earths for clean energy transition
.............................................................................................
Australia`s Great Barrier Reef stays off UNESCO danger list, still under `serious threat`
.............................................................................................
Heatwaves: world reels from wildfires, floods as US and China discuss climate crisis
.............................................................................................
Britain planning to overhaul planning to meet net zero targets
.............................................................................................
What are the health risks from wildfire smoke?
.............................................................................................
Spain saw hottest, second-driest spring on record this year
.............................................................................................
Climate-vulnerable nations prepare to deploy `loss and damage` funds
.............................................................................................
Global carbon dioxide removal totals 2 billion tonnes per year
.............................................................................................
Rising climate costs to challenge countries, companies in 2023
.............................................................................................
Mild heat wave like to continue in parts of country
.............................................................................................
Jungle in heart of Malaysia`s capital hunts corporate cash to thrive
.............................................................................................
Environmentalists push for taxes on plastic sachets in Bangladesh after India ban
.............................................................................................
Climate change is driving 2022 extreme heat and flooding
.............................................................................................
On and off screen, Aquaman`s Jason Momoa fights for world`s oceans
.............................................................................................
Unilever vowed to scrap polluting plastic packets, then fought to keep them
.............................................................................................
Plastic sachets: As big brands cashed in, a waste crisis spiralled
.............................................................................................
Rain-triggered floods in Bangladesh conjure climate warnings
.............................................................................................
Millions stranded as floods ravage parts of Bangladesh, India, more rain forecast
.............................................................................................
Report casts doubt on net-zero emissions pledges by big global companies
.............................................................................................
How billions in infrastructure funding could worsen global warming
.............................................................................................
John Kerry, US climate envoy, tells top polluters `we all must move faster`
.............................................................................................
India proposes new wording on phasing coal `down` not `out`
.............................................................................................
How `cool roofs` can help fight climate change
.............................................................................................
G20 leaders to commit to tackle `existential` climate challenge
.............................................................................................
Fossil fuel drilling plans undermine climate pledges, UN report warns
.............................................................................................
How hungry sea otters affect the sex lives of sea grass
.............................................................................................
E-waste destroying soil, human fertility making world heated
.............................................................................................
`Many G7 member countries polluting Earth`
.............................................................................................
17% people are dying due to world temperature
.............................................................................................
How to prepare for hurricane season and evacuations
.............................................................................................
Chief Advisor: Md. Tajul Islam,
Editor & Publisher Fatima Islam Tania and Printed from Bismillah Printing Press, 219, Fakirapul, Dhaka-1000
Editorial Office: 167 Eden Complex, Motijheel, Dhaka-1000.
Phone: 02-224401310, Mobile: 01720090514, E-mail: muslimtimes19@gmail.com
2022 @ All Right Reserved By www.themuslimtimes-bd.com