COP26: PM calls on nations to pull out the stops as he returns to summit
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is returning to the COP26
climate summit in Glasgow - urging nations to "pull out all the
stops" to limit warming.
The first draft of an agreement setting out how countries
will cut emissions to avoid temperature rises of above 1.5C is due to be
published later.
The agreement - known as a "cover decision" - is
the negotiated outcome of the COP26 talks.
Mr Johnson said negotiators would be working to "turn
promises into action".
Despite the promises made at the summit so far, the planet
is still heading for 2.4C of warming above pre-industrial levels, according to
a report by Climate Action Tracker.
A global average temperature rise of just 2C could mean a
billion people are affected by fatal heat and humidity, the Met Office has
warned.
Scientists say the world needs to limit warming to 1.5C
above pre-industrial times to avoid the most dangerous impacts of climate
change.
Ahead of his return to the summit, Mr Johnson said:
"Negotiating teams are doing the hard yards in these final days of COP26
to turn promises into action on climate change. There's still much to do."
The prime minister said he would be meeting ministers and
negotiators to hear about the progress made and where gaps must be bridged.
"This is bigger than any one country and it is time for
nations to put aside differences and come together for our planet and our
people," he said.
"We need to pull out all the stops if we're going to
keep 1.5C within our grasp."
A coalition of nations which are vulnerable to climate
change, along with the US and European nations, is pressing for countries to
submit action plans in the next year in line with limiting warming to 1.5C, and
by 2023 to produce their long-term plans to meet the target.
No comments