Analyse
The claim that climate change poses an 'existential threat' is supported by the **IPCC’s 2018 Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C**, which warned of catastrophic impacts (e.g., extreme weather, ecosystem collapse, food/water insecurity) if warming exceeds 1.5°C. Guterres’ framing of it as the 'defining issue' reflects the **UN’s own policy priorities** and **peer-reviewed literature** (e.g., *Nature*, *Science*) labeling climate change as a **multiplier of global risks**, from conflict to economic instability. His use of 'direct existential threat' is not hyperbolic but mirrors terminology used by scientists and security experts (e.g., **2020 *Global Catastrophic Risks* report**).
Achtergrond
The **2018 UN Climate Action Summit** was convened to accelerate implementation of the **Paris Agreement (2015)**, amid growing evidence of insufficient progress. By 2018, global CO₂ levels had reached **407 ppm** (NOAA), the highest in 800,000 years, with visible impacts like record wildfires (California, Australia) and melting Arctic ice. Guterres’ statement echoed earlier warnings, including the **2009 Copenhagen Accord** and **2015 UNFCCC synthesis reports**, which framed climate change as a civilizational challenge.
Samenvatting verdict
António Guterres' 2018 statement aligns with overwhelming scientific consensus on climate change as a severe, existential risk backed by IPCC reports and global climate assessments.