Climate summit can yield 鈥榚normous progress鈥 says US envoy
In run-up to U.N. climate change talks, U.S. climate envoy John Kerry聽offers hope, while underscoring urgent need for nations to lower carbon emissions.
In run-up to U.N. climate change talks, U.S. climate envoy John Kerry聽offers hope, while underscoring urgent need for nations to lower carbon emissions.
United States climate envoy John Kerry said Saturday he thinks 鈥渆normous progress鈥 can be made at the upcoming U.N. climate talks in Scotland, but more governments must come up with concrete commitments in the next 30 days.
Mr. Kerry attended a preparatory meeting in Milan where delegates from around the world sought to identify where progress can be made before the talks start in Glasgow on Oct. 31.
The 12-day summit aims to secure more ambitious commitments to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius, with a goal of keeping it to 1.5 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels. The event also is focused on mobilizing financing and protecting vulnerable communities and natural habitats.
鈥淭he bottom line is, folks, as we stand here today, we believe we can make enormous progress in Glasgow, moving rapidly towards the new goals that the science is telling us we must achieve,鈥欌 Mr. Kerry said. That means achieving a 45% reduction in carbon emissions in the next 10 years.
鈥淭his is the decisive decade,鈥欌 he added.
Mr. Kerry, a former U.S. senator and secretary of state, said that countries representing 55% of the world鈥檚 gross domestic product 鈥 Britain, Canada, Japan, the United States, and the 27 European Union members 鈥 have submitted plans that hit the 1.5 degrees target by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
But the American diplomat also noted that the 89 new national submissions ahead of the summit would only cut emissions by 12%, and that the sum of all 191 submissions as they are currently written would increase emissions between now and 2030 by 16%.
Mr. Kerry declined to single out any country but said there are ways to achieve lower emissions that aren鈥檛 that expensive, including organizing power grids and making transmissions more efficient.
China is the world鈥檚 biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, and the United States is second. Mr. Kerry said U.S. President Joe Biden has had 鈥渃onstructive鈥 talks on the subject with Chinese President Xi Jinping. Mr. Kerry also highlighted commitments by India鈥檚 leader, Ram Nath Kovind, to install 450 gigawatts of renewable power over the next decade.
鈥淕lasgow, my friends, is around the corner. It is the starting line of the race of centuries and the race of this decade,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ll countries have to sprint and join together to understand that we are all in this together.鈥欌
Mr. Kerry added, 鈥漈his is the test of collective multilateralism to the highest level that I have seen in my public career.鈥
The European commissioner for climate action, Frans Timmermans, separately underlined the importance of meeting the $100 billion annual funding commitment to help vulnerable countries fight climate change during 2020-2025,聽as demanded by youth activists who met earlier in Milan.
Mr. Timmermans said the financing needs going forward would be much greater than that amount and that public funding alone would not be able to cover the anticipated price tag, which runs in the trillions.
Already the Earth has seen a 1 degree Celsius temperature change and unpredictable weather patterns that have destroyed harvests and killed livelihoods around the world, Mr. Timmermans said.
鈥淪o there can be no doubt in anybody鈥檚 mind that we are fighting for the survival of humanity, and that the climate crisis and the threatening ecocide are the biggest threat humanity faces,鈥欌 Mr. Timmermans said. 鈥淲e need to change, and we need to change radically, and we need to change fast. That鈥檚 going to be bloody hard. That鈥檚 the bad news.鈥欌
Alok Sharma, Britain鈥檚 president for COP26, said 鈥渄elivering on (the) $100 billion is absolutely a matter of trust.鈥 He also said the presence of youth delegates and activists, including Greta Thunberg and Vanessa Nakate, ahead of the climate summit preparatory meetings had energized the process.
鈥淎s we go forward of the next few weeks and into COP, we must always keep the voices of the young people foremost in our minds and think about what their response would be to the outcomes that we reach,鈥欌 Mr. Sharma said.
This story was reported by The Associated Press.