China Daily Global Weekly

A window of opportunit­y for carbon neutrality

Pandemic recovery offers a chance to fix our global environmen­t, reimagine our future

- By Antonio Guterres

As the world marks the fifth anniversar­y of the adoption of the landmark Paris Agreement on climate change, a promising movement for carbon neutrality is taking shape. By next month, countries representi­ng more than 65 percent of harmful greenhouse gasses and more than 70 percent of the world economy will have committed to achieve net-zero emissions by the middle of the century.

At the same time, the main climate indicators are worsening. While the COVID-19 pandemic has temporaril­y reduced emissions, carbon dioxide levels are still at record highs — and rising. The past decade was the hottest on record; Arctic sea ice in October was the lowest ever, and apocalypti­c fires, floods, droughts and storms are increasing­ly the new normal. Biodiversi­ty is collapsing, deserts are spreading, and oceans are warming and choking with plastic waste. Science tells us that unless we cut fossil fuel production by 6 percent every year between now and 2030, things will get worse. Instead, the world is on track for a 2 percent annual rise.

Pandemic recovery gives us an unexpected yet vital opportunit­y to attack climate change, fix our global environmen­t, re-engineer economies and reimagine our future. Here is what we must do:

First, we need to build a truly global coalition for carbon neutrality by 2050.

The European Union has committed to do so. The United Kingdom, Japan, the Republic of Korea and more than 110 countries have done the same. So, too, has the incoming United States administra­tion. China has pledged to get there before 2060.

Every country, city, financial institutio­n and company should adopt plans for net-zero — and act now to get on the right path to that goal, which means cutting global emissions by 45 percent by 2030 compared with 2010 levels. In advance of next November’s UN Climate Conference in Glasgow, government­s are obligated by the Paris Agreement to be ever more ambitious every five years and submit strengthen­ed commitment­s known as Nationally Determined Contributi­ons, and these NDCs must show true ambition for carbon neutrality.

Technology is on our side. It costs more to simply run most of today’s coal plants than it does to build new renewable plants from scratch. Economic analysis confirms the wisdom of this path. According to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on, despite inevitable job losses, the clean energy transition will create 18 million net new jobs by 2030. But we must recognize the human costs of decarboniz­ation, and support workers with social protection, re-skilling and up-skilling so that the transition is just.

Second, we need to align global finance with the Paris Agreement and the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, the world’s blueprint for a better future.

It is time to put a price on carbon; end fossil fuel subsidies and finance; stop building new coal power plants; shift the tax burden from income to carbon, from taxpayers to polluters; make climate-related financial risk disclosure­s mandatory; and integrate the goal of carbon neutrality into all economic and fiscal decisionma­king. Banks must align their lending with the net-zero objective, and asset owners and managers must decarboniz­e their portfolios.

Third, we must secure a breakthrou­gh on adaptation and resilience to help those already facing dire impacts of climate change.

That is not happening enough today: Adaptation represents only 20 percent of climate finance. This hinders our efforts to reduce disaster risk. It is also not smart; every $1 invested in adaptation measures could yield almost $4 in benefits. Adaptation and resilience are especially urgent for small island developing states, for which climate change is an existentia­l threat.

Next year gives us a wealth of opportunit­ies to address our planetary emergencie­s, through major United Nations conference­s and other efforts on biodiversi­ty, oceans, transport, energy, cities and food systems. One of our best allies is nature itself: Nature-based solutions could provide one-third of the net reductions in greenhouse gas emissions required to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement. Indigenous knowledge can help to point the way. And as humankind devises strategies for preserving the environmen­t and building a green economy, we need more women decision-makers at the table.

COVID-19 and climate change have brought us to a threshold. We cannot go back to the old normal of inequality and fragility; instead we must step toward a safer, more sustainabl­e path. This is a complex policy test and an urgent moral test. With decisions today setting our course for decades to come, we must make pandemic recovery and climate action two sides of the same coin.

 ??  ?? Antonio Guterres,
UN secretaryg­eneral.
Antonio Guterres, UN secretaryg­eneral.
 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

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