assuming everyone else stays the course, the u.s. economy gains from backing out of the transition. by 2050, gross domestic product is 0.8% higher than it would otherwise have been. but decarbonizing becomes more costly for countries that stay the course. global emissions climb almost 10%, modestly raising the risks from global heating, but not dramatically.
if other countries follow the u.s., they dodge transition costs, but the damage caused by climate change intensifies. carbon dioxide emissions are 75% higher, with hotter, poorer countries hit hardest. with temperatures rising, by 2050, vietnam loses just over 3% of gdp, sub-saharan africa nearly 2% and india about 1.7%. the u.s. and china face losses of about 1% and 1.5%, respectively.
—bloomberg news
file photo of pope leo xiv.
alessandra tarantino
/
ap
pope leo xiv calls for urgent climate action: report
pope leo xiv on monday warned that climate change is accelerating faster than political will, urging world leaders at cop30 to take “concrete actions” before the window to keep warming below 1.5 c closes, according to
a report in france 24.
he called for unwavering global solidarity behind the paris agreement, the report stated.
“creation is crying out in floods, droughts, storms and relentless heat,” the pope said. “one in three people live in great vulnerability because of these climate changes. to them, climate change is not a distant threat, and to ignore these people is to deny our shared humanity,” he added.