Climate change is as dangerous as war, says UN chief

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onMar 1, 2007 @ 11:12 PST

Ban told an international U.N. school conference on global warming, meeting in the U.N. General Assembly hall, that the world needed a more coherent system of international environmental governance and he hoped the US would take the lead in the climate-change fight beyond Kyoto’s end inย 2012.

โ€œThe majority of the United Nations work still focuses on preventing and ending conflict,โ€ Ban said. โ€œBut the danger posed by war to all of humanity and to our planet is at least matched by the climate crisis and globalย warming.

โ€œIn coming decades, changes in our environment and the resulting upheavals from droughts to inundated coastal areas to loss of arable land are likely to become a major driver of war andย conflict.โ€

Last month a U.N.-organized panel of 2,500 top climate scientists from more than 130 nations blamed human activities for global warming and predicted more droughts, heat waves and a slow rise in sea levels that could continue for more than 1,000 years even if greenhouse-gas emissions wereย capped.

The panel predicts a โ€œbest estimateโ€ that temperatures would rise by between 1.8 and 4.0 degrees Celsius (3.2 and 7.8 Fahrenheit) in the 21stย century.

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