Daily Press

UN, US officials press urgent action to avert climate threat

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN — The U.N.’s top human rights official and President Joe Biden’s climate envoy called Thursday for countries to step up the fight against global warming, describing it as an issue of sheer survival for humankind.

In a statement ahead of the U.N. climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, the global body’s High Commission­er for Human Rights said “only urgent, priority action can mitigate or avert disasters that will have huge — and in some cases lethal — impacts on all of us, especially our children and grandchild­ren.”

Michelle Bachelet urged government­s taking part in the climate meeting to make good on pledges of financial aid to help poor countries that are most at risk to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and cope with the impacts of global warming.

The summit starts Sunday and ends Nov. 13.

“This is a human rights obligation and a matter of survival,” she said. “Without a healthy planet to live on, there will be no human rights — and if we continue on our current path — there may be no humans.”

Her words were echoed by U.S. climate envoy John Kerry, who warned of the dramatic impacts that exceeding the 2015 Paris accord’s goal on global warming will have on nature and people.

“Devastatin­g consequenc­es follow if we exceed the 1.5 degrees (Celsius, 2.7 Fahrenheit),” he said in a speech Thursday at the London School of Economics. “And we are now already just about at 1.2 C.

“No one is exaggerati­ng when they call this an existentia­l threat. Just ask the people in the Marshall Islands, Fiji or in the vulnerable nations of the world,” Kerry said.

Kerry cited recent commitment­s by the Biden administra­tion for the United States to aim for “net zero” greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century, similar moves by other nations and business, and a growing awareness of the urgency of tackling climate change.

Citing a recent U.N. report highlighti­ng the gap between countries’ pledges and what scientists say is needed to cap warming at 1.5 C by the end of the century, Kerry said particular responsibi­lity lies with the top 20 economies of the world.

Many of those countries will be gathering for a G-20 meeting in Rome this weekend, where climate is expected to be a major topic.

Kerry said Glasgow “is not the end of the road” and countries must keep raising their targets over the coming years.

A report released Thursday by climate think tanks says changes in sectors from power generation to industry and agricultur­e need to speed up.

It looked at 40 indicators and “the bad news is right now that none of them are on track,” said report co-author Kelly Levin, the chief of Science, Data and Systems Change at the Bezos Earth Fund.

Separately, the Red Cross federation said climate and weather-related disasters have caused more than 30 million people to flee their homes in 2020 — three times more than the number of people displaced by war.

 ?? JEFF J. MITCHELL/GETTY ?? Activists set up an art installati­on of smoke and faux flames Thursday ahead of the COP26 summit in Glasgow, Scotland. The climate conference starts Sunday.
JEFF J. MITCHELL/GETTY Activists set up an art installati­on of smoke and faux flames Thursday ahead of the COP26 summit in Glasgow, Scotland. The climate conference starts Sunday.

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