Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Emissions-curbing hopes revived

U.N. chief heartened by pledges from world’s top polluters

- FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN — The U.N.’s climate chief says deadlines set by some of the world’s top polluters to end greenhouse gas emissions, along with U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s pledge to take Washington back into the Paris accord, have boosted hopes of meeting the pact’s ambitious goals.

The agreement signed in the French capital five years ago aims to keep global warming well below 3.6 Fahrenheit — ideally no more than 2.7 degrees — compared to pre-industrial times by the end of the century. Experts say the world is far off track and that, with average temperatur­es already up by about 2 degrees, drastic action is needed in the next 30 years.

But the recent announceme­nt by China, the world’s top polluter, that it will phase out emissions by 2060, and pledges by Japan and South Korea to do the same a decade earlier, have drawn cautious optimism from climate campaigner­s. Their hopes were further boosted by Biden’s election win earlier this month and his pledge to undo President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris agreement.

“These announceme­nts are really extraordin­ary,” Patricia Espinosa, head of the U.N. climate office, said. “Just a few months ago, I don’t think anybody would have really predicted that we would see these kinds of announceme­nts at this time. And especially in the middle of the pandemic.”

Espinosa said countries’ willingnes­s to commit to tougher emissions limits shows that curbing global warming remains a political priority — and that the target set in Paris is a possibilit­y.

“Science has told us that we still have a chance to achieve it,” she said. “Looking at these announceme­nts, I think that we should be also having even more hope.”

But Espinosa cautioned against complacenc­y. “I don’t want to sound like it’s a done deal,” she said. “We are still far from there.”

The pandemic brought a sudden halt to the U.N.’s carousel of climate meetings, disrupting complex negotiatio­ns on a wide range of environmen­tal issues and forcing the cancellati­on of the global body’s annual climate summit for the first time in a quarter century.

“It has been challengin­g,” Espinosa said by video from her agency’s headquarte­rs in Bonn, Germany, noting how carefully forged relationsh­ips were suddenly confined to virtual conversati­ons. “It does not substitute the in-person contacts, but it works.”

In some ways, however, the coronaviru­s crisis has proved to be an opportunit­y to change old habits, she added.

“Everybody is clear that we will not go back to the normal that we had before the pandemic,” Espinosa said, recalling her globe-trotting days as Mexico’s top diplomat from 2006 to 2012 that sometimes included two long-distance flights a day. “You cannot continue to travel like you used to travel.”

The 62-year-old praised young people in particular for being willing to adapt, forgoing some of the planet-warming habits of older generation­s such as owning cars and indulging in meatheavy diets that scientists say need to change.

“This deep transforma­tion is very much going to be driven by the youth,” Espinosa said.

Still, political leadership remains key to weaning economies off fossil fuels, especially in countries where large numbers of jobs are tied to extraction of oil, natural gas and coal, she said, adding that government­s will also have to look beyond national interests when it comes to investing in low-carbon solutions.

That will mean denying covid-19 economic recovery funds to polluting industries while putting up the $100 billion each year world leaders pledged in Paris to help poor countries tackle climate change by 2020, she said.

“It is absolutely indispensa­ble that we align those recovery packages to the goals of the Paris agreement,” Espinosa said. “We should not go back to the past. We cannot continue to invest in a gray future.”

Her comments were echoed Thursday by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who called on the European Union to ramp up its emissions target for 2030, from 40% cuts to at least 55%.

“I urge you to continue to lead with concrete and ambitious near-term-bv commitment­s,” Guterres said in a speech to the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank.

The 27- nation bloc, which has also tentativel­y committed to reaching “net zero” emissions by 2050, is in talks to earmark parts of a vast stimulus package for so-called green recovery projects.

“The proposed [$2.1 trillion] investment package is an opportunit­y to invest in measures and technologi­es needed to achieve climate neutrality by 2050,” Guterres said.

 ?? (AP/David Goldman/File) ?? A polar bear stands on the ice on July 22, 2017, in the Franklin Strait in the Canadian Arctic Archipelag­o.
(AP/David Goldman/File) A polar bear stands on the ice on July 22, 2017, in the Franklin Strait in the Canadian Arctic Archipelag­o.

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