The COP26 Climate Talks Are Opening. Here’s What
to Expect.
Some fundamental differences, including over money,
divide the leaders heading to Glasgow. The outcome will determine, to a large
extent, how humanity will survive on a hotter planet.
By Somini
Sengupta
Oct. 30,
2021
The future
is on the line.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/30/climate/climate-summit-glasgow.html
As
presidents and prime ministers arrive in Glasgow this week for a pivotal
climate summit, the outcome will determine, to a large extent, how the world’s
seven billion people will survive on a hotter planet and whether far worse
levels of warming can be averted for future generations.
Already,
the failure to slow rising temperatures — brought on by the burning of oil, gas
and coal — has led to deadly floods, fires, heat, and drought around the world.
It has exposed a gaping chasm between the scientific consensus, which says
humanity must rapidly reduce the emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases
to avert climate catastrophe, and what political leaders and many corporate
executives have been willing to do.
“That we
are now so perilously close to the edge for a number of countries is perhaps
the tragedy of our times,” said Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados, in
an interview.
Tensions
loom over the 12-day summit. Some poor countries hard hit by climate disasters
are holding out for money promised, and yet to be delivered, by the
industrialized nations that fueled the crisis. Polluting countries are pressing
each other to cut their emissions while jockeying for advantage and wrestling
with the impacts on their own economies.
Complicating
matters, the need for collective action to tackle such an urgent, existential
global threat comes at a time of rising nationalism. This makes the talks in
Glasgow a test of whether global cooperation is even possible to confront a
crisis that does not recognize national borders.
“I don’t
think you can solve the climate crisis on your own as a nationalist leader,”
said Rachel Kyte, a former United Nations official and now dean of the Fletcher
School at Tufts University. “You depend on the actions of others.”
The science
is clear on what needs to be done. Emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and
other greenhouse gases driving up global temperatures need to be cut by nearly
half by 2030, less than a decade. In fact, they are continuing to grow. The
World Meteorological Organization warned last week that the amount of
heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere had reached a record high in
2020 despite the pandemic and is rising again this year.
As a
result, the average global temperature has risen by more than 1 degree Celsius
since the Industrial Revolution. The scientific consensus says that if it rises
by 1.5 degrees Celsius, or 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, it will significantly
increase the likelihood of far worse climate catastrophes that could exacerbate
hunger, disease and conflict.
Limiting
temperature rise to within the 1.5 degree Celsius threshold has become
something of a rallying cry for many powerful countries, including the United
States. That is not within reach: Even if all countries achieve the targets
they set for themselves at the 2015 Paris Agreement, average global
temperatures are on track to rise by 2.7 degrees Celsius by the end of the
century.
The Stakes
at the U.N. Climate Summit
About
20,000 people will attend COP26, a climate change conference hosted by the United
Nations starting Oct. 31 in Glasgow. Participants are seeking to set new
targets for cutting emissions from burning coal, oil and gas. Here are a few
things to keep in mind before the gathering begins:
The United
States climate envoy, John Kerry, who had recently described the summit as “the
last best hope” last week tried to manage expectations. “Glasgow was never,
ever going to get every country joining up in Glasgow or this year
necessarily,” he said in a telephone interview Thursday. “It was going to galvanize
the raising of ambition on a global basis.”
The goals
of the summit are to have countries nudge each other to rein in their
emissions, commit financial support to low-income countries to deal with the
impacts, and iron out some of the rules of the Paris Agreement. The agreement
stipulated that countries come together every five years to update their
climate action plans and nudge each other to do more. The five-year mark was
missed because of the pandemic. The climate summit was postponed. Climate disasters
piled on.
The
pandemic is important in another sense. It offers a grim lesson on the
prospects for collective action. Countries turned inward to protect their own
citizens, and sometimes their own pharmaceutical industries, resulting in a
starkly inequitable distribution of vaccines. Half the world’s population
remains unvaccinated, mainly in countries of the global south.
“We’ve just
experienced the worst part of humanity’s response to a global crisis,” said
Tasneem Essop, executive director of Climate Action Network, an activist group.
“And if this is going to be the track record for addressing the global climate
crisis, then we are in trouble. I’m hoping this is a moment of reflection and
inflection.”
Meanwhile,
anger is mounting against official inaction. The streets of Glasgow are
expected to fill with tens of thousands of protesters.
The main
battle lines shaping up at the Glasgow talks, known as the 26th session of the
Conference of Parties, or COP26, have to do with who is responsible for the
warming of the planet that is already underway, who should do what to keep it
from getting worse, and how to live with the damage already done.
The venue
is itself a reminder. In the mid-19th century, Glasgow was a center of heavy
industry and shipbuilding. Its power and wealth rose as Britain conquered
nations across Asia and Africa, extracting their riches and becoming the
world’s leading industrial power, until the United States took the mantle.
The largest
share of the emissions that have already heated the planet came mainly from the
United States and Europe, including Britain, while the largest share of
emissions produced right now comes from China, the world’s factory.
In some
cases, the divisions in Glasgow pit advanced industrialized countries,
including the United States and Europe, against emerging economies, including
China, India, and South Africa. In other cases, they set large emerging
polluters, like China and India, against small vulnerable countries, including
low-lying island nations in the Pacific and Caribbean, which want more
aggressive action against emissions.
Tensions
over money are so profound that they threaten to derail cooperation.
In 2010,
rich countries had promised to pay $100 billion a year by 2020 to help poor
countries address climate change. Some of that money has been paid but the full
amount will not materialize until 2023, three years late, according to the
latest plan announced by a group of industrialized countries.
Even more
fraught is the idea of industrialized countries also paying reparations to
vulnerable nations to compensate for the damage already done. Known in
diplomatic circles as a fund for loss and damage, discussions about this have
been postponed for years because of opposition from countries like the United
States.
Mr. Kerry
this week said he was “supportive” of the idea of assisting countries who can’t
adapt their way out of climate change, but remained concerned about opening the
floodgates of liability claims.
Then there
are tensions over whether countries are doing their fair share to reduce their
emissions.
The Biden
administration has pledged that the United States will slash emissions by about
half by 2030, compared to 2005 levels. But President Biden’s ability to reach
that target is unclear, as legislation has been watered down and stalled in
Congress, partly by a single Democratic lawmaker with ties to the fossil fuel
industry.
The United
States has been leaning hard on China to set more ambitious targets in Glasgow.
But so far, Beijing has said only that its emissions will continue to grow and
decline before 2030. China is wary of the United States’ ability to fulfill its
emissions and finance targets, a skepticism only fueled by Mr. Biden’s
inability so far to get his climate agenda through Congress.
Besides,
the two countries are locked in bitter tensions over a host of other issues,
from trade to defense to cybersecurity.
While
President Biden is in Glasgow, President Xi Jinping of China is likely to
appear only by video, precluding any face-to-face discussions.
President
Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil also plans to stay home. President Vladimir V. Putin
of Russia is not going, either, but may offer remarks remotely. India is
unlikely to commit to phase out its heavy reliance on coal power to meet its
growing energy needs, though it is quickly expanding solar power in its energy
mix.
The most
optimistic diplomats say countries will be forced to come around and cooperate.
“Because of
the global nature of this threat,” the Danish environment minister, Dan
Jorgenson, said, “you will see countries, in their own interest, work with
countries they see as their competitor.”
What Is
Success?
No matter
what happens at the summit, success in battling climate change will be measured
by how quickly the global economy can pivot away from fossil fuels. Coal, oil
and gas interests, and their political allies, are fighting that transition.
But a transformation is visible.
The global
use of fossil fuels, which has been on a steady march upward for 150 years, is
projected to peak by the middle of this decade, assuming that countries mostly
hew to the promises they’ve made under the Paris accord, according to
projections by the International Energy Agency. Wind and solar have become the
cheapest source of electricity in some markets, coal use is set to decline sharply
by midcentury, despite an uptick this year driven by increased industrial
activity in China, and electric vehicles are projected to drive down global oil
demand by the 2030s.
Global
temperature rise has also slowed since 2015, when the Paris Agreement was
signed.
Some see
that as evidence that climate diplomacy is working. Most countries are doing
what they signed up to do, which is to set their own climate targets and “egg
each other on” to do better, said Ani Dasgupta, president of World Resources
Institute, a Washington-based research and advocacy group.
“The
ratcheting up of ambition, we do see it happening,” he said. “It’s not
happening fast enough.”
From her
home in Barbados, Ms. Mottley sees another promising sign: pressure on leaders
of countries in the global north, as the dangers of climate change increasingly
afflict their citizens. That includes the floods that killed nearly 200 people
in Germany, Europe’s richest country, and the fires that scorched homes in
California, America’s richest state.
“It is the
populations of the advanced countries coming to the recognition that this is a
serious issue that is causing the needle to move,” she said. “It is that kind
of domestic political pressure from ordinary people that is going to save the
world in my view.”
Somini
Sengupta is an international climate correspondent. She has also covered the
Middle East, West Africa and South Asia for The Times and received the 2003
George Polk Award for her work in Congo, Liberia and other conflict zones. @SominiSengupta
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