COP26: Climate summit enters final day
The COP26 climate summit in Glasgow is entering its final
day (12), amid growing fears that the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5C
is unlikely to be met.
UN Secretary General António Guterres bluntly told the
Associated Press news agency that the goal was on "life support".
He said the summit would probably not see governments make
the pledges needed to cut CO2 emissions by enough.
Earlier, COP26 President Alok Sharma warned that time was
running out to close a deal before the summit ended.
Scientists say limiting global temperature rises to 1.5C
will help humanity avoid the worst climate impacts. This is compared with
pre-industrial temperatures.
At Paris in 2015, world leaders pledged to try to keep the
world from warming by more than between 1.5C to 2C through sweeping greenhouse
gas emissions cuts. The latest projections are for a rise of 2.7C.
Guterres warned that promises to reduce emissions were
meaningless while governments continued to invest in fossil fuels.
"Promises ring hollow when the fossil fuels industry
still receives trillions in subsidies," he said.
He called the announcements made so far in Glasgow "far
from enough", adding "We know what must be done."
But he said hope remained "until the last moment".
Meanwhile, Sharma called on negotiators to find solutions to difficult issues before the official closing of the summit scheduled for 18:00 GMT.
"Whilst the window on keeping 1.5 within reach is
closing, it is still possible to get there," he said.
Sharma also said more work was needed on Article 6, which is
about carbon markets and how countries balance their fossil fuel use.
Mary Robinson, former Irish president and head of a group of
senior political leaders on climate, accused some of the world's major carbon
emitters of sabotaging any attempts to secure a more ambitious action plan at
COP26.
She told the Associated Press that Russia and Saudi Arabia
were "pushing back hard" to block any mention in the final deal out
of Glasgow of working to phase out coal, or to reduce government subsidies to
fossil fuels.
COP26 is the biggest climate change conference since the
landmark Paris talks. Some 200 countries are being asked for their plans to cut
greenhouse gas emissions - which cause global warming - by 2030.
Yesterday (11), a small group of countries announced an
alliance to phase out oil and gas production. Led by Denmark and Costa Rica,
Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance also includes France, Wales and Ireland - but not
the UK.
Activists and politicians cautiously welcomed Thursday's
surprise declaration from the US and China to try to keep warming limited to
1.5C - but campaigners said both countries needed to take concrete action
Meanwhile, representatives from Ghana, Ethiopia, Bangladesh
and Tuvalu held a press conference claiming that the US was blocking progress
at COP26. They say the US is dismissing the concerns of the poorest and most
vulnerable nations over climate finance.
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