Bay of Plenty Times

COP26: What you need to know

Next month’s high-stakes summit will help set climate goals for the next 30 years — but can it succeed?

- Shelley Inglis

Next month, over two weeks, world leaders and national negotiator­s will meet in Scotland to discuss what to do about climate change.

It’s a complex process that can be hard to make sense of from the outside, but it’s how internatio­nal law and institutio­ns help solve problems no country can fix alone.

I worked for the United Nations for several years as a law and policy adviser and have been involved in internatio­nal negotiatio­ns.

Here’s what’s happening behind closed doors and why people fear COP26 might not meet its goals.

What is COP26?

In 1992, countries agreed to an internatio­nal treaty called the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which set ground rules and expectatio­ns for global cooperatio­n on combating climate change.

It was the first time the majority of nations formally recognised the need to control greenhouse gas emissions, which cause global warming that drives climate change.

That treaty has been updated, including in 2015, with the Paris climate agreement. That agreement set the goal of limiting global warming to “well below” 2C to avoid catastroph­ic climate change.

COP26 stands for the 26th Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC.

The “parties” are the 196 countries that ratified the treaty plus the European Union. The United Kingdom, partnering with Italy, is hosting COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, from October 31 to November 12, after a one-year postponeme­nt due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Why are world leaders so focused on climate change?

The UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest report, released in August, warns in its strongest terms yet that human activities have unequivoca­lly warmed the planet, and that climate change is now widespread, rapid and intensifyi­ng.

The IPCC’S scientists explain how climate change has been fuelling extreme weather events and flooding, severe heat waves and droughts, loss and extinction of species, and the melting of ice sheets and rising of sea levels. UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres called the report a “code red for humanity”.

Enough greenhouse gas emissions are already in the atmosphere, and they stay there long enough, that even under the most ambitious scenario of countries quickly reducing their emissions, the world will experience rising temperatur­es through at least the middle of the century.

However, there remains a narrow window of opportunit­y. If countries can cut global emissions to “net zero” by 2050, that could bring warming back to under 1.5 C in the second half of the 21st century. How to get closer to that course is what leaders and negotiator­s are discussing.

What happens at COP26?

During the first days of the conference, about 120 heads of state, such as US President Joe Biden, and their representa­tives will gather to demonstrat­e their political commitment to slowing climate change.

Once the heads of state depart, country delegation­s, often led by ministers of environmen­t, engage in days of negotiatio­ns, events and exchanges to adopt their positions, make new pledges and join new initiative­s. These interactio­ns are based on months of prior discussion­s, policy papers and proposals.

Non-government­al organisati­ons and business leaders also attend and COP26 has a public side with sessions focused on topics such as the impact of climate change on small island states, forests or agricultur­e, as well as exhibition­s and other events.

The meeting ends with an outcome text that all countries agree to.

Guterres publicly expressed disappoint­ment with the COP25 outcome, and there are signs of trouble heading into COP26.

What is COP26 expected to accomplish?

Countries are required under the Paris Agreement to update their national climate action plans every five years, including at COP26. This year, they’re expected to have ambitious targets through 2030. These are known as nationally determined contributi­ons, or NDCS.

The Paris Agreement requires countries to report their NDCS, but it allows them leeway in determinin­g how they reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. The initial set of emission reduction targets in 2015 was far too weak to limit global warming to 1.5C.

One key goal of COP26 is to ratchet up these targets to reach net-zero carbon emissions by the middle of the century.

Another aim of COP26 is to increase climate finance to help poorer countries transition to clean energy and adapt to climate change. This is an important issue of justice for many developing countries whose people bear the largest burden from climate change but have contribute­d least to it. Wealthy countries promised in 2009 to contribute US$100 billion ($138b) a year by 2020 to help developing nations, a goal that has not been reached. The US, UK and EU, among the largest historic greenhouse emitters, are increasing their financial commitment­s, and banks, businesses, insurers and private investors are being asked to do more.

Other objectives include phasing out coal use and generating solutions that preserve, restore or regenerate natural carbon sinks, such as forests.

Another challenge that has derailed past COPS is agreeing on implementi­ng a carbon trading system outlined in the Paris Agreement.

Are countries on track to meet the internatio­nal climate goals?

The UN warned in September that countries’ revised targets were too weak and would leave the world on pace to warm 2.7C by the end of the century. However, government­s are also facing another challenge this autumn that could affect how they respond: Energy supply shortages have left Europe and China with price spikes for natural gas, coal and oil.

China — the world’s largest emitter — has not yet submitted its NDC. Major fossil fuel producers such as Saudi Arabia, Russia and Australia seem unwilling to strengthen their commitment­s. India — a critical player as the second-largest consumer, producer and importer of coal globally — has also not yet committed.

Other developing nations such as South Africa and Mexico are important. So is Brazil, which, under Javier Bolsonaro’s watch, has increased deforestat­ion of the Amazon — the world’s largest rainforest and crucial for biodiversi­ty and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

What if COP26 doesn’t meet its goals?

Many insiders believe that COP26 won’t reach its goal of having strong enough commitment­s from countries to cut global greenhouse gas emissions 45 per cent by 2030. That means the world won’t be on a smooth course for reaching net-zero emissions by 2050 and the goal of keeping warming under 1.5C.

But organisers maintain that keeping warming under 1.5C is still possible. Former secretary of state John Kerry, who has been leading the US negotiatio­ns, remains hopeful that enough countries will create momentum for others to strengthen their reduction targets by 2025.

The cost of failure is astronomic­al. Studies have shown that the difference between 1.5 and 2 degrees Celsius can mean the submersion of small island states, the death of coral reefs, extreme heat waves, flooding and wildfires, and crop failure.

That means premature deaths, more mass migration, major economic losses, large swathes of unlivable land and conflict over resources and food — what the UN secretary-general has called “a hellish future.”

The Conversati­on

Shelley Inglis is the executive director of the Human Rights Centre, University of Dayton .

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