Britain?s Energy and Climate Secretary Ed Davey has told an audience at the Royal Society, in London, climate science is ?irrefutable? and ?screams out from decade upon decade of research?.
In a direct attack on climate sceptics who believe man made global warming is at best overblown or at worst a hoax, Mr Davey argued they were risking their children?s futures by slowing efforts to cut emissions.
?You know, when I am confronted by some of the most dogmatic and blinkered people who deny that climate change is happening, I am reminded of the sentiment of the famous USA Today cartoon,? he said.
?If we really are wrong about climate change, we will have created a better world for nothing,? he paraphrased the carton.
?In reality, those who deny climate change and demand a halt to emissions reduction and mitigation work, want us to take a huge gamble with the future of every human being on the planet, every future human being, our children and grandchildren, and every other living species.?
Mr Davey speaking at the AVOID symposium, which sees Britain?s leading scientists discussing the possible impacts that climate change will have on the world.
Newsagency reports say earlier this year AVOID, a collaboration of climate experts, published research showing that to achieve a 50 per cent chance of limiting warming to 2?Celsius, global emissions need to peak in the next few years and be followed by rapid long-term reductions.
The most stringent emissions scenario in the study keeps global temperature rise below 2 degrees Celsius and has global greenhouse gas emissions which peak in 2016 and then reduce at five per cent a year to 2050.
To achieve this Mr Davey called for ?green, clean energy and transport? as well as investment in new energy efficient technologies.
His comments came a day after United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon expressed his frustration at the lack of climate action from world leaders in the face of what he called a ?gathering threat?.
?Too many leaders seem content to keep climate change at arm?s length, and in its policy silo. Too few grasp the need to bring the threat to the centre of global security, economic and financial management,? Mr Ban said.
?It is time to move beyond spending enormous sums addressing the damage, and to make the investments that will repay many times over,? he said.
Mr Ban noted the potential of the renewable industry to do that and to spur the world economy, as proposed in his Sustainable Energy for All initiative.
?A global climate change agreement would give us the engine we need to advance us decisively on this path,? he stressed, welcoming United States President Barack Obama?s ?new resolve? to address climate change and give it high political priority.
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