Cop26 chief urges China, other world emitters to produce plans for carbon cuts

By Nneka Nwogwugwu

The president of vital UN climate has urged world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases must produce clear plans to cut their carbon output drastically.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change set out the starkest warning yet on the widespread and “unprecedented” changes to the climate that are “unequivocally” the result of human actions.

Extreme weather resulting from these changes was already seen around the world and growing worse, in the form of rising temperatures, more frequent and fiercer storms, heatwaves, droughts, floods and sea level rises, according to the biggest assessment of climate science in eight years.

Global temperatures were likely to top 1.5C above pre-industrial levels in the next two decades, the threshold set as the ambition of the 2015 Paris climate agreement, the world’s climate science authority said. Only sharp and immediate cuts in greenhouse gases this decade could stabilise the climate system.

Alok Sharma, the UK minister who will preside over the Cop26 UN climate summit in Glasgow this November, said countries must act.

 “If ever there was going to be a wake-up call to the world when it comes to climate change, this report is it. But the future is not yet written. The very worst of climate change is still avoidable.”

The Paris climate agreement ambition of limiting warming to 1.5C, and staving off the worst impacts of climate breakdown, was “still achievable, but retreating and retreating fast”, he said.

“What we really need now is for all major emitters to play their part, and the G20 are going to be absolutely key to our 1.5C future,” he added. G20 governments, comprising the world’s biggest economies and including developed and developing countries, are responsible for about 80% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and about 85% of GDP.

Sharma did not single out particular governments, but those yet to put forward plans for emissions cuts before Cop26 include China, India and Brazil.

The spotlight now falls firmly on China, the world’s biggest emitter and second largest economy, and the biggest producer and consumer of coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel.

“This must be the Cop that consigns coal to history,” said Sharma.

Helen Mountford, the vice-president of climate and economics at the World Resources Institute, said this decade was “truly our last chance” of keeping to a relatively safe climate, and the actions of leading emitters would be crucial. “It’s imperative for China to announce more stringent emission reductions than it has hinted at thus far,” she said.

China has set out a target of reaching net zero emissions by 2060, and has said its emissions will peak by 2030.

 But the government still plans new coal-fired power plants, and its reliance on coal returned after a slowdown caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, despite the falling price of wind and solar power making them cheaper than coal.

The International Energy Agency has warned that global emissions will rise next year by a record amount, largely driven by a resurgence in coal in China.

Carbon emissions
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