Oman Daily Observer

CLIMATE CHANGE

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When it comes to climate change and the battle to keep it in check, 2016 was a year of extremes.

The euphoria of the super-fast entry into force of the Paris Agreement to curb global warming crashed days later with the election of Donald Trump as US president, fuelling fears he may pull the world’s second-largest emitting nation out of the pact.

But the explosion of efforts to drive climate action forward — at local, national and internatio­nal levels — nurtured hopes the global movement to tackle climate change has grown more powerful than any single government.

One important reason is that money is moving away from environmen­tally harmful projects into cleaner, greener investment­s.

Renewable energy has become much cheaper, making it competitiv­e with fossil fuels in many places.

And in a year set to notch up a new heat record, stoked partly by the El Niño phenomenon, government­s stepped up concrete measures to protect their people from climate and weather extremes such as floods, droughts and storms.

As 2016 draws to a close, the Thomson Reuters Foundation asked experts to list the top five signs climate action is gathering speed. Here is a compilatio­n of their views.

1.AGREEMENTS GALORE The Paris Agreement on climate change took effect in November — 11 months after it was crafted by UN member states.

Its swift entry into force was unexpected, but the prospect of a sceptical US leader moving into the White House spurred internatio­nal determinat­ion to push on with ratificati­on.

At UN climate talks last month, government­s gave themselves two years to hammer out the rules to put the Paris accord into practice and review national plans to keep temperatur­e rise to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius.

In October, 191 countries in the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on (ICAO) agreed on a global carbon reduction and offsetting scheme for air travel.

That same month, 197 parties to the Montreal Protocol on substances that deplete the ozone layer signed up to an amendment to phase down hydrofluor­ocarbons (HFCs), one of the fastest growing and most potent greenhouse gases, used mainly in cooling and refrigerat­ion. 2.FOSSIL FUELS LOSE FRIENDS In May, the G7 group of wealthy countries set a deadline for the first time to end “inefficien­t” fossil fuel subsidies, encouragin­g all countries to do so by 2025, although the wider G20 shied away from a firm commitment at a later summit.

Meanwhile, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney led the charge to ramp up pressure on companies to heed the financial implicatio­ns of their fossil fuel assets.

An internatio­nal task force set up to prevent market shocks from global warming will ask companies to disclose how they manage risks to their business from climate change, as well as the impact of emissions cuts on their bottom line.

And a global campaign to persuade investors to pull their money out of fossil fuels gathered pace, doubling in size in 15 months, as the number of institutio­ns that have committed to divest reached 688, representi­ng more than $5 trillion in assets under management. 3.RENEWABLES STEAL THE

LIMELIGHT The Internatio­nal Energy Agency boosted its five-year growth forecast for renewable energy thanks to strong policy support in the United States, China, India and Mexico, and sharp cost reductions.

Renewables surpassed coal last year to become the largest source of installed power capacity in the world, it said.

Solar energy had a good year, as 2016 heralded the first solar-powered roundthe-world flight, plans for roads paved with solar panels were announced for four continents, and Tesla Motors Inc unveiled solar roof tiles.

A group of 48 developing states most at risk from climate change said they would strive to make their energy production 100 per cent renewable as soon as possible before 2050.

4.PUSH TO PREPARE Severe droughts linked to a powerful El Niño, hitting more than 60 million people, especially in southern Africa, reminded government­s of the importance of preparing for weather and climate extremes by improving infrastruc­ture, public services and food security.

UN envoys drafted a blueprint to reduce the damage from such events in future, while aid agencies tested innovative ways to get money to where it’s needed before a disaster strikes.

Meanwhile, developing states are working on national plans to adapt to climate change effects — including wild weather, rising seas and melting glaciers — backed with up to $3 million per country from the fledgling Green Climate Fund. 5.IN WITH THE CLIMATE CROWD

This year saw a flurry of initiative­s to tackle climate change get under way or expand — involving businesses, investors, cities and local government­s, among others.

For example, the Under2 Coalition, a club of sub-national government­s that have committed to cut their emissions by at least 80 per cent by 2020, grew its membership to 165, accounting for a third of the global economy.

And the Science Based Targets initiative said more than 200 companies had pledged to set emissions reduction targets in line with the global effort to keep temperatur­e rise under 2 degrees.

“2016 truly marked the year of transition from endless talks and global negotiatio­ns on how to tackle climate change to moving into action by government­s, provinces, cities, companies, parliament­s and affected communitie­s,” said Saleemul Huq, director of the Dhakabased Internatio­nal Centre for Climate Change and Developmen­t (ICCCAD).

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