Cop26: the time for prevarication is over
Katharine
Viner
Glasgow 2021 must be the moment when the promise of
Paris 2015 becomes real – history will not forgive us otherwise
Sat 30 Oct
2021 02.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/oct/30/cop26-the-time-for-prevarication-is-over
Summits do
not always live up to the name. They can get bogged down in detail and
disagreement, never really reaching altitude.
That is
often the case with the annual UN climate summits known simply as the Cop,
which have earned a reputation since the first was held 26 years ago for being
bewildering marathons that overrun and underdeliver.
This year,
perhaps more than any other year, the world needs the summit that starts
tomorrow in Scotland to hit the heights. We’ve had make-or-break moments
before, of course, when the climate movement has teetered on the brink of
collapse at a Cop only to be rescued by a deal (or fudge) in injury time.
But Glasgow
2021 feels even more do-or-die, because the climate emergency is more finely
balanced than ever before between hope and despair, and the effects are already
all around us.
One path,
the path of short-sighted national self-interest, leads us deeper into the
crisis that Guardian reporters are covering with ever greater frequency around
the world: the heatwaves of Russia, eastern Europe and the west of North
America this year; the floods in China, Germany, India, England, Greece,
Thailand. The drought in eastern and southern Africa, threatening hunger, even
famine, in places such as Madagascar. The wildfires in Australia, the United
States, Canada, Europe, recurring with greater intensity, greater destruction.
Increasingly,
at certain times and in certain places, the Earth is literally becoming
unlivable. And this is a world warmer by just 1.2C over pre-industrial levels.
A world two or even three degrees warmer in which our descendants will swelter
in a few decades’ time if we carry on regardless is a terrifying prospect.
But the
word “crisis” has a second, less well-known meaning, from the original Greek –
a turning point, an opportunity. What is perhaps different about this Cop, this
moment, is that the opportunity is greater than ever.
There has
never been as much innovation, investment and interest in green technology. The
revolution in renewables, which have soared from a niche interest 30 years ago
to a cheap, global alternative energy source that provides more than one
quarter of the world’s electricity, is one of humanity’s most remarkable
achievements.
Heat pumps
and hydrogen are becoming household words, if not quite yet household
appliances. Batteries, zero-carbon ships and aeroplanes, meat-free food and
electric vehicles and other emissions-cutting technologies are all still in
their infancy, full of potential. Science, so vital in our dogfight with Covid,
is once again playing its part.
Now we need
the politicians to play their part too. The fate of billions rests in their
hands. Business and consumers are showing willing – but people take their cue
from the government, from policy, from binding commitments.
So the
Cop26 climate summit, which starts in Glasgow tomorrow must be the moment when
the hope generated by the Paris deal in 2015 becomes real.
The
conference needs to find agreement on deep cuts to emissions. It needs to
provide serious funding for developing nations to help them cope with the
impacts of extreme weather which are already being felt. It needs to commit to
ending the razing of forests.
And most
importantly, it needs to set targets for short-term progress and agree on a
road map for action for the next decade. Every minute decisions are delayed,
greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise – and the task ahead becomes more
difficult, and urgent.
Taken
together, ambitious measures in these areas could keep alive the goal of
limiting global heating to 1.5C. It will be hard. The UN climate convention
operates by the consensus of all nations, and geopolitical shifts have
fractured international cooperation in many areas in recent years.
But we all
live under the same sky. We must hold on to the fact that if the necessary systemic
changes take place – from energy to transport to food – we could build a
cleaner, healthier world.
As Nicolas
Stern, the British economist and author of the seminal 2006 government study
into the costs of climate change, says, a just transition to a low-carbon
economy is the only viable future for humanity.
The time
for prevarication is over.
History
will not forgive this generation for the inevitable legacy that will come from
inaction
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