3h ago
07.03 CET
Leaders
to address summit as report shows failure to cut emissions
Damian
Carrington
It’s day
three of Cop29 here in Baku and more global leaders will take to the stage,
including Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Pakistan’s Shehbaz Sharif. The aim is to
spur negotiators towards a strong deal by setting out the stark impacts of the
climate crisis and the “terrible truth” brought by Spain’s Pedro Sánchez and by
Mohamed Muizzu from the Maldives did just that.
The
president of host nation Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev took a different tack and said
his nation’s oil and gas was a “gift from God”.
But all
countries are today facing a disastrous report card on climate action in the
publication of this year’s Global Carbon Budget report. This finds that
emissions from fossil fuels, the overwhelming cause of global heating, will
rise in 2024 to another record high.
That is a
stark contrast to the agreement at the last summit, Cop28, to “transition away
from fossil fuels”, which was hailed as a landmark for the simple but
astonishing reason that no previous summit agreement had mentioned fossil
fuels. It is also a stark contrast to the reality that emissions must plunge by
43% by 2030 to have any chance of keeping global temperature rise below 1.5C
and limiting the climate carnage.
“The impacts
of climate change are becoming increasingly dramatic, yet we still see no sign
that burning of fossil fuels has peaked,” says Prof Pierre Friedlingstein, at
the University of Exeter, who led the report.
So the
negotiators have their work cut out to ensure that the next round of national
climate commitments, due by February, deliver a step change. Tuesday did see a
positive moment when the UK announced a strong commitment, pledging to cut
emissions by 81% by 2035, a move that was widely welcomed in Baku.
Wednesday
will also see events backed by the Cop29 presidency on advancing the effort to
triple nuclear energy and address the challenges for small island developing
states, who face literal extinction from the rising seas.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário