Bangkok Post

Guterres blasts recent climate talks in Madrid

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ISLAMABAD: Government­s must deliver decisive actions and “transforma­tional change” to combat global warming, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Sunday, blasting a recent climate summit in Madrid.

The so-called COP25 climate talks in the Spanish capital in December were supposed to build on breakthrou­gh promises made at the 2015 UN Climate Change Conference in Paris.

Instead, government­s equivocate­d and observers decried their response as inadequate and unambitiou­s.

“Our planet is burning but too many decision makers continue to fiddle,” Mr Guterres said in a speech he delivered in Islamabad.

“The only answer is decisive climate action... Gradual approaches are no longer enough.”

A United Nations panel concluded late in 2018 that avoiding global climate chaos will require a major transforma­tion of society and the world economy. The landmark report said global CO2 emissions must drop 45% by 2030, and reach “net zero” by 2050, to cap temperatur­e rise at 1.5C, the safe cap set as a goal in the Paris accord.

Mr Guterres said that at the next climate conference, the COP26 in Glasgow later this year, “government­s must deliver the transforma­tional change our world needs and that people demand, with much stronger ambition”.

Mr Guterres said rich countries should lead the way, including by ending “perverse” fossil fuel subsidies.

Following a year of deadly extreme weather and weekly protests by millions of young people, Madrid negotiator­s were under pressure to send a clear signal that government­s were willing to intensify their efforts.

The summit was at times close to collapse as rich polluters, emerging powerhouse­s and climate-vulnerable nations groped for common ground in the face of competing national interests.

Mr Guterres credited Pakistan for banning plastic bags in the capital Islamabad and for a large tree-planting programme.

Mr Guterres is in Pakistan for a threeday visit that will include his attendance at a conference on Pakistan’s hosting of Afghan refugees for 40 years.

Pakistan is one of the largest refugeehos­ting nations in the world, home to an estimated 2.4 million registered and undocument­ed people who have fled Afghanista­n, some as far back as the Soviet invasion of 1979.

Many live in camps, while others have built lives for themselves in Pakistan’s cities, paying rent and contributi­ng to the economy.

Mr Guterres said the “preferred, durable solution for the refugees has always been one-time repatriati­on with safety and dignity to the country of origin”.

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