Climate Action

David Attenborough: It could soon be too late to tackle climate change

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and David Attenborough speak with school children during a conference about the COP26 UN Climate Summit, at the Science Museum in London, Britain February 4, 2020.

Attenborough said leading nations had a duty to help poorer countries because industrialisation had been one of the major factors in driving climate change. Image: Chris J Ratcliffe/Pool via REUTERS

Timothy Reuter
  • It will be too late to tackle the climate crisis if the COP26 summit is not a success, British naturalist David Attenborough warned world leaders.
  • The summit in Glasgow is of vital importance to unify actions to limit the effects of climate change.
  • The U.N. said greenhouse gas concentrations had hit a record last year and the world was "way off track" in capping rising temperatures.

British naturalist David Attenborough warned world leaders it would be too late to tackle climate change if a U.N. climate summit in Scotland does not succeed, and said richer nations had a moral responsibility to act.

Britain has cast the United Nations COP26 climate conference which began in Glasgow on Oct. 31 as the last big chance to slow rising temperatures, and hopes to persuade leaders to adopt tougher climate targets.

Attenborough, 95, told the BBC it would be "really catastrophic" if richer nations failed to support poorer ones, and time was running out.

"Every day that goes by in which we don't do something about it is a day wasted," he said. "If we don't act now, it'll be too late."

The U.N. said greenhouse gas concentrations had hit a record last year and the world was "way off track" in capping rising temperatures.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it was "touch and go" as to whether COP26 would succeed in securing the requirements needed to limit the rise in the average global temperature to 1.5 degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels and to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

a chart showing earth's temperature rises
Earth’s temperature has risen by 0.14° F (0.08° C) per decade since 1880. Image: NOAA
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    Attenborough said leading nations had a duty to help poorer countries because industrialisation had been one of the major factors in driving climate change. He warned that whole parts of Africa would become unliveable.

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    Raging fires in Australia and the United States were still being dismissed by some as one-off incidents, he said, even though extreme weather events had shown climate scientists were correct to have been warning about rising temperatures in the last 20 years.

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