Arab Times

CO2 pollution reductions ‘highly inadequate’: UN

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NEW YORK, Oct 30, (AP): The world, especially richer carbon polluting nations, remains “far behind” and is not doing nearly enough -- not even promising to do enough -to reach any of the global goals limiting future warming, a United Nations report said.

That “highly inadequate” inaction means the window is closing, but not quite shut yet, on efforts to keep future warming to just a few more tenths of a degree from now, according to Thursday’s Emissions Gap report from the United Nations Environmen­t Programme.

“Global and national climate commitment­s are falling pitifully short,” United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Thursday. “We are headed for a global catastroph­e.”

The world is weaning itself from fossil fuels too slowly, the report and experts said.

“The report confirms the utterly glacial pace of climate action, despite the looming precipice of climate tipping points we’re approachin­g,” said climate scientist Bill Hare, head of Climate Analytics that also examines what countries are promising and doing about carbon emissions in its own analysis.

Instead of limiting warming to 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustr­ial levels, the global goals set by 2015 Paris agreement, the way the world is acting now, warming will hit 2.8 degrees (5 degrees Fahrenheit) by the year 2100, the UN report said. Countries concrete pledges would bring that down to 2.6 degrees (4.7 degrees Fahrenheit). It’s already warmed 1.1 degrees (2 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times.

“In all likelihood we will pass by 1.5,” UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen told The Associated Press in an interview. She didn’t say when she thinks that would happen. “We can still do it, but that means 45% emissions reductions” by 2030.

“It’s really about understand­ing that every little digit (tenth of a degree of warming) that we shave off is a lesser catastroph­ic outlook,” Andersen said.

The emissions gap is the difference between the amount of carbon pollution being spewed between now and 2030 and the lower levels needed to keep warming to 1.5 or 2 degrees.

Commitment­s

Guterres said “the emissions gap is a by-product of a commitment­s gap. A promises gap. An action gap.”

Stanford University climate scientist Rob Jackson, who chairs the independen­t Global Carbon Project that tracks carbon dioxide emissions around the world but wasn’t part of the UN report, said “another decade of fossil emissions at current rates and we’ll zip past 1.5C .... The way things are going though we’ll zip past 1.5C, past 2C and -- heaven help us -- even 2.5 or 3C.”

“We’re failing by winning too slowly,” Jackson said in an email. “Renewables are booming and cheaper than ever. But COVID stimulus plans and the war in Ukraine have disrupted global energy markets and led some countries (to) revert to coal and other fuels. This can’t continue in a safe climate.”

In 10 days, yearly internatio­nal climate negotiatio­ns will begin in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, and in the run up to the United Nations conference, several reports highlight different aspects of the world’s battle to curb climate change. Wednesday, a different UN agency looked at countries’ official emission reduction targets. Thursday’s Emissions Gap report looks at what countries are actually doing as well as what they promise to do in the future in various pledges.

The G20 nations, the richest countries, are responsibl­e for 75% of the heat-trapping pollution, Andersen said, adding “clearly the more those G20s lean in, the better we will be.”

The report said “G20 members are far behind in delivering” on their promises to reduce emissions. Taking out the special cases of Turkey and Russia, current polices by G20 nations fall 2.6 billion metric tons a year short of the 2030 goal, the report said. Both Turkey and Russia’s targets for 2030 have higher pollution levels than current policies project and using their projection­s would make the G20 emissions gap artificial­ly low, the report said.

“It’s critical that China, as well as the US and other G20 countries, actually lead,” Andersen said. She hailed the newly passed $375 billion American climate- and inflationf­ighting law as an example of action instead of just promises.

The report said that by 2030 the US law should prevent 1 billion metric tons of carbon emissions, which is much more than other nations efforts made this year.

“What we’re calling for is an accelerate­d pace because there are good things happening out there in a number of countries, but it’s just not fast enough and it’s not consistent enough,” Andersen said.

Also:

BRUSSELS: In 2021, the European Union and its 27 member states committed 23.04 billion euro (USD 23.2 billion) in climate finance to support developing countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change.

The EU Council of Ministers Friday approved this figure in preparatio­n for the United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP27), which will take place from 6 to 18 November in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt.

The EU and its member states are determined to continue delivering on their internatio­nal climate finance commitment­s towards the developed countries’ collective goal of mobilising USD 100 billion per year, which is applicable through to 2025, said an EU statement.

Internatio­nal public climate finance plays an important role in helping developing countries to implement the 2015 Paris climate change agreement, together with climate finance from private sources, it noted.

Meanwhile, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has called on global leaders to prioritize solutions to the climate change crisis threatenin­g food security in African countries and the effects on the continent of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

During an official visit to South Africa, Sanchez met with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa a day after meeting with recently elected Kenyan President William Ruto in Nairobi.

His visit to South Africa, Africa’s most developed country, and Kenya, East Africa’s economic hub, comes days before the African continent hosts the flagship United Nations climate conference known as COP27, which will be held in Egypt. Experts say the African continent contribute­s the least to global warming but will suffer from it the most.

Sanchez said the conference should deliver tangible solutions for Africa. Ramaphosa agreed. “An important part of our collective response to climate change is increased support for green, sustainabl­e energy policies and technologi­es,” the South African president said.

Sanchez said Spain would make available up to 2.1 billion euros funding to South Africa over the next five years, which will be invested in various sectors including renewable energy. South Africa is heavily reliant on coal for its troubled electricit­y system that often leaves parts of the country without power for hours at a time with rolling blackouts.

The Spanish prime minister also seeks to strengthen economic ties. His delegation includes Spanish business leaders.

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