Matt McGrath photograph

Matt McGrath

Matt McGrath Life story


Matthew John McGrath was a member of the Irish American Athletic Club, the New York Athletic Club, and the New York City Police Department. At the time of his death at age 64, he attained the rank of Police Inspector, and during his career received the NYPD's Medal of Valor twice.

Climate change: Is the world warming faster than expected?

Climate change: Is the world warming faster than expected?
Nov 17,2023 9:01 pm

...By Matt Mcgrath & Mark PoyntingBBC News climate & scienceClimate records have tumbled in 2023...

Lightning fires threaten planet-cooling forests

Lightning fires threaten planet-cooling forests
Nov 9,2023 11:41 am

...By Matt Mcgrath & Erwan RivaultBBC News Climate & Science and Data Journalism TeamsClimate change could bring more lightning to forests in northern reaches of the globe, increasing the risk of wildfires, a new study shows...

'Virtually certain' that 2023 will be warmest year after October record

'Virtually certain' that 2023 will be warmest year after October record
Nov 7,2023 10:11 pm

...By Matt Mcgrath & Mark PoyntingBBC Climate & Science It is now " virtually certain" that 2023 - a year of deadly heatwaves, floods and fires - will be the warmest on record, new data suggests...

World breaches key 1. 5C warming mark for record number of days

World breaches key 1. 5C warming mark for record number of days
Oct 6,2023 7:40 pm

...By Matt Mcgrath, Mark Poynting, Becky Dale & Jana TauschinskiBBC News climate & science and data journalism teamThe world is breaching a key warming threshold at a rate that has scientists concerned, a BBC analysis has found...

Climate change: Warmest September on record as global temperatures soar

Climate change: Warmest September on record as global temperatures soar
Oct 5,2023 7:11 am

...By Matt Mcgrath & Mark PoyntingBBC Climate & Science teamThe world s September temperatures were the warmest on record, breaking the previous high by a huge margin, according to the EU climate service...

Climate change: July set to be world's warmest month on record

Climate change: July set to be world's warmest month on record
Jul 27,2023 2:31 pm

...By Matt Mcgrath & Mark PoyntingBBC News Climate & ScienceAmid blistering heatwaves, July is " virtually certain" to be the world s warmest month on record, say scientists...

Climate change: Shipping agrees net-zero goal but critics chide deal

Climate change: Shipping agrees net-zero goal but critics chide deal
Jul 7,2023 6:31 am

...By Matt Mcgrath & Malcolm SeniorBBC News Climate & Science The global shipping industry has agreed to reduce planet warming gases to net-zero " by or around 2050" but critics say the deal is fatally flawed...

Shipping faces showdown over greenhouse gases

Shipping faces showdown over greenhouse gases
Jul 3,2023 2:11 am

...By Matt Mcgrath & Malcolm SeniorBBC News Climate & ScienceThe shipping industry is under growing pressure to dramatically curb planet-warming emissions from smokestacks...

Shipping faces showdown over greenhouse gases

Jun 28,2023 9:30 pm

By Matt Mcgrath & Malcolm SeniorBBC News Climate & Science

The shipping industry is under growing pressure to dramatically curb planet-warming emissions from smokestacks.

Maritime transport emits as much CO2 in a year as Germany, but is the biggest global sector without a goal for cutting emissions to " net zero".

Some delegates at the UN summit starting on Monday want this by 2050 and emissions halved by 2030.

Campaigners say it would be the climate " deal of the decade" if agreed.

Reaching " net zero" would mean that any remaining shipping emissions were matched by actively removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.

For years, the shipping industry, governments and environmental groups have wrangled on How To make The Transport of goods by sea greener.

The issue was deemed just too difficult to be included in the 2015 Paris climate pact to keep down Global Warming .

It matters because around 90% of the products and goods The World consumes travel by ship.

These vessels often burn highly polluting fuels which contribute as much as 3% of The World 's global carbon dioxide emissions, roughly the same amount as that of Germany or 243 coal plants.

That could grow by as much as 50% by The Middle of This Century if stronger action isn't taken, experts have warned.

The shipping industry's current plans only envisage a halving of emissions by The Middle of This Century , a commitment that scientists say is Far Out of line with the Paris climate agreement.

This Week , under the control of the UN's International Maritime Organisation (IMO), delegates from 175 shipping countries will meet in London to try and agree on a new timeline for completely decarbonising their industry.

Campaigners want to see a much tougher target, with a reduction of approximately half by 2030 and a new net-zero goal for 2050. Others want to go Further Still and see a full decarbonisation brought forward to 2040.

" If member states get this right, they can set the shipping sector In Line to meet the Paris temperature targets and promote investment in green technologies that will completely transform the sector, " said Kerrlene Wills, Director for Ocean and Climate, UN Climate Foundation.

Many countries are in favour - and some shipping companies also want to push forward with plans for cleaner transport. The World 's second largest container shipping line, Maersk, are taking a bullish approach, setting their own goal of zero emissions by 2040.

Previous attempts to strengthen climate ambition at the IMO, have fallen foul of A Number of countries such as China, India and Saudi Arabia , who are keen to protect their own domestic shipping interests.

Observers say that if the London meeting can agree these new goals for all shipping, it would the biggest advance against Climate Change since the Paris agreement.

" You would quite genuinely have a climate agreement not just of the year, but probably of the decade, " said John Maggs , from The Clean Shipping Coalition of campaigners, speaking to reporters.

Within the wider industry, there is a recognition that reform is necessary but there is a concern that new targets will be too challenging and expensive.

However shows that cutting shipping emissions in half this decade would only add some 10% to the total costs of operations.

Last week, the Secretary-General of the IMO, Kitack Lim urged delegates " to make the compromises and find solutions" describing 2023 as " a year of decisive climate action".

His views were echoed by Faig Abbasov from campaigners Transport and Environment:

" Waiting until 2050 to decarbonise is a bit like waiting until your house burns before you call the Fire Brigade … what is needed is political will; IMO needs to either Step Up or ship out! "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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