reserves in the ground and unburned, and who s oil and gas will that be? every country, every company will lobby to burn all of theirfuels, how do we stop that? so that s the challenge the world is facing. now, let s look at the potential consequences. the ipcc report says global warming is already contributing to ever more extreme events such as these record breaking wildfires in europe last year. by 2100, extreme flooding like this in pakistan, that usually occurs once in a century, could happen at least once a year in many areas of the world. here s dr ella gilbert, a climate scientist for the british antarctic survey.
i lobby to burn all of their fuels, i how do we stop that? so that s the challenge the world is facing now let s look at the potential consequences. the ipcc report says global warming is already contributing to ever more extreme events such as these record breaking wildfire5 in europe last year. by the end of this century, extreme flooding like this in pakistan that usually occurs once in 100 years could happen at least once a year in many areas of the world. here s dr ella gilbert, a climate 5cienti5t for the british antarctic survey. it also impacts all of us because it has impacts for global weather patterns. consequences for global weather patterns. and of course, when we have melting ice from greenland or antarctica, which are these huge ice caps when the ice starts to enter the oceans, that contributes to sea level rise, which impacts us all over the world, no matter where we are. it all comes as the world s two biggest polluter5, china and the us, continue
the rate of temperature rise in the last half century is the highest in 2,000 years. concentrations of carbon dioxide are at their highest in at least two million years. the climate time bomb is ticking. let s look through the key findings of the ipcc report. it condenses eight years of climate science from six reports published since 2014. the report says the world is expected to warm above 1.5 degrees centigrade by the early 20305, and that nations will need to make a rapid and deep reduction in emissions across all sectors this decade to prevent the planet from overheating dangerously beyond that level. but it also adds there are multiple, feasible and effective options available now to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change. here s dr friederike 0tto,
this is 0utside source, live from the bbc newsroom. 0ur lead story is. the most detailed climate change report yet says the world has all the tools to tackle global warming, but isn t using them effectively. vladimir putin has told the visiting chinese leader, xijinping, that he s looking forward to discussing beijing s plans to end the war in ukraine. let s turn to the global financial markets which have reacted nervously to sunday night s emergency takeover of the swiss bank credit suisse. over the weekend, credit suisse was bought by its swiss rival ubs in a deal brokered by the swiss government, who deemed the bank too big to fail. ubs purchased credit suisse, at a fraction of what its closing market value was before the weekend, for $3.1 billion, or about £2.5 billion. here s the chief executive of ubs explaining the rationale behind the deal.
against a key part of the post brexit trade rules. the un secretary general has warned the climate time book is ticking. a new assess. from scientists said there were no time to lose, in tackling climate change. the suburb governmental panel on climate change says the worst can by a verityed if emissions are cut rapidly but that is unlikely to stop global temperatures rising by less than the target of 1.5 degrees celsius. storms. floods. heatwaves. all these weather extremes are likely to intensify as the world continues to warm, un scientists warned today. their report was published at a un