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- Phone documentary details Afghan women's struggle under Taliban govt
- G20 wrestles with wars, 'turbulence' in run-up to Trump
- Kane hoping to extend England career beyond 2026 World Cup
- Gazans rebuild homes from rubble in preparation for winter
- 'Vague' net zero rules threaten climate targets, scientists warn
- Stocks, dollar hesitant as traders eye US rate outlook, Nvidia
- G20 wrestles with wars, climate in run-up to Trump
- 'Agriculture is dying': French farmers protest EU-Mercosur deal
- Beyonce to headline halftime during NFL Christmas game
- Rescuers struggle to reach dozens missing after north Gaza strike
- Russia vetoes Sudan ceasefire resolution at UN
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- Schools closed in Beirut after deadly Israeli air raid
- Anger, pain in Turkey as 'newborn deaths gang' trial opens
- Kremlin says Biden 'fuelling' war as Russian strikes rock Odesa
- UN climate chief at deadlocked COP29: 'Cut the theatrics'
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'Vague' net zero rules threaten climate targets, scientists warn
Countries must not count the carbon dioxide naturally sucked up by Earth's forests in their net zero climate plans, scientists said on Monday, warning that "vague" rules could end up with the world warming more than expected.
The scientists, who developed the original science behind net zero, issued their warning in a new study as nations gathered in Azerbaijan for the latest round of UN climate talks.
The world's oceans, forests and soil absorb planet-heating carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, meaning they play a crucial role in efforts to stop temperatures from rising further.
These "natural carbon sinks" currently suck up around half of all the carbon dioxide emitted by humanity.
Under the Paris climate agreement, nations committed to curbing global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial times.
While they did not specify how they were going to achieve that target, scientists say the world needs to slash emissions almost in half this decade and reach net zero -- when humanity will no longer emit more greenhouse gas than it captures -- by 2050.
Once emissions are down to virtually zero, forests and oceans should be able to absorb some of the additional carbon dioxide that has built up in the atmosphere so that global temperatures can "stabilise," said Myles Allen, an Oxford University scientist and lead author of the study in the journal Nature.
Allen helped develop the science behind net zero in the 2000s.
But a problem has emerged since that "didn't occur to me at the time," he told a press conference.
As nations have announced their climate plans, some have claimed the amount of carbon naturally removed by their forests and land would make up for some of the emissions by their people and industries.
But natural carbon sinks cannot be counted on "to do two jobs at once," Allen emphasised.
"If we're going to count on them to mop up our historical emissions... we cannot at the same time use them to offset future fossil fuel emissions."
- Warming risk -
This may seem like a slight tweak in greenhouse gas accounting, but it could mean that the world thinks it is on a path to limiting warming to 1.5C, whereas in fact it could shoot past 2C "and have warming continuing into the future," he said.
Russia, for example, "apparently recently pointed out that they might just achieve net zero while increasing their fossil fuel use because they have such large forests," Allen said.
The European Union has recently started partly claiming the work of its forests as an offset against emissions, said Glen Peters, research director at the Center for International Climate Research in Oslo.
It is not that countries are breaking the rules, Allen said: "It's just the rules are a bit vague."
Most countries and many big companies have announced some kind of net zero plan, but the details about exactly how and when they will be carried out vary widely, threatening their integrity, experts have warned.
- 'Geological net zero' -
The researchers called for the world to set its sights on "geological net zero", which would mean that for every tonne of carbon dioxide emitted by a fossil fuel -- the main source of emissions -- a tonne would need to be sucked out of the atmosphere and permanently put back in the ground.
While there are hopes of a boom in technologies that extract CO2 from the air, just 0.1 percent of carbon dioxide emissions are currently captured and locked away -- that needs to increase to 100 percent by mid-century, Allen said.
Peters added: "If you don't take the fossil fuels out of the ground in the first place, then you're a long way to solving the problem."
Last week, it was predicted that humanity would again break the record for carbon dioxide emissions in 2024 -- which is expected to be the hottest year in recorded history.
Y.Aukaiv--AMWN