Pakistan elects as Vice-Chair of IPCC Working Group-I
Islamabad, Pakistan: Director-General, Ministry of Climate Change, Muhammad Irfan Tariq, has been elected as vice chair of Working Group-I of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Other candidates of the same group elected during the recent IPCC election include Valerie Masson-Delmotte as Co-Chair (France),Panmao Zhai as Co-Chair (China), Edvin Aldrian as Vice-Chair (Indonesia), Fatima Driouech as Vice-Chair (Morocco), Gregory Flato as Vice-Chair (Canada), Jan Fuglestvedt as Vice-Chair (Norway),Carolina Vera as Vice-Chair (Argentina) and Noureddine Yassaa as Vice-Chair (Algeria).
According to Secretary Climate Change Arif Ahmed Khan, this is a great milestone, the country has achieved. The election of Irfan Tariq has brought a global recognition of Pakistan’s efforts in the global fight against climate change country’s extreme vulnerability, to the negative impacts of global warming.
The IPCC’s Working Group-I titled “Physical Science Basis” assesses the physical scientific aspects of the climate system and climate change,said a press release issued here on Friday.
The main topics assessed by the group include changes in climate-altering greenhouse gases and aerosols in the atmosphere;observed changes in air, land and ocean temperatures, rainfall, glaciers and ice sheets, oceans and sea level; historical and paleoclimatic perspective on climate change; bio-geochemistry, carbon cycle, gases and aerosols; satellite data and other data;climate models; climate projections, causes and attribution of climate change.
The election took place in Dubrovnik, Croatia, where the IPCC held its 42nd Session. IPCC elected Hoesung Lee of the Republic of Korea as its new Chair. Lee, aged 69, is professor in the economics of climate change, energy and sustainable development at Korea University’s Graduate School of Energy and Environment in the Republic of Korea. He is currently one of the IPCC’s three vice-chairs.
Elections for other positions on the IPCC Bureau, including the Co-Chairs of the IPCC Working Groups, took place over 6-8 October.
The election of the new Bureau of 34 members including the new chair, opens the way for work to start on the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, expected to be completed in 5 to 7 years. The IPCC completed its Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) in November 2014. The key findings of the AR5 Synthesis Report are including human influence on the climate system is clear; the more humans disrupt the climate, the more they risk severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts; and the world has the means to limit climate
change and build a more prosperous, sustainable future.
He said that i remain deeply committed to play my part on behalf of my country, to provide policymakers with the highest quality scientific assessment of climate change and to save earth and its inhabitants from devastating impacts of global warming. He emphasised that next phase of the IPCC work would see the 46-member newly elected body boost understanding of regional
impacts, especially in developing countries, and improve the way the IPCC’s findings to the public are communicated.
Above all, the new IPCC body needs to provide more information about the options that exist for preventing and adapting to climate change.I look forward to working with my IPCC colleagues to reach these goals and I thank them for their support, he said.
He told that the IPCC has been established by WMO and UNEP to assess scientific, technical and socio-economic information relevant for the understanding of climate change, its potential impacts and options for adaptation and mitigation.