The Arizona Republic

Australia branded worst climate performer ahead of UN summit

- Rod McGuirk

CANBERRA, Australia – Australia was the worst climate performer among comparable developed countries since nations pledged in the 2015 Paris agreement to take action to limit global warming, a think tank said Thursday ahead of a key climate conference in Scotland later this month.

The U.N. summit in Glasgow, known as COP26, will bring together thousands of diplomats, scientists and environmen­tal campaigner­s to assess progress since nations agreed in the Paris accord to limit warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). The meeting in Glasgow is widely seen as the last chance to hold global warming to 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison plans to attend the conference starting Oct. 31, but lawmakers in his governing coalition are arguing over adoption of a tougher national carbon reduction target.

Morrison wants to commit Australia to reducing carbon emissions to net zero by 2050, but some lawmakers in the conservati­ve government’s junior coalition partner, the Nationals party, are resisting. “Australia ranks dead last among comparable nations (in) addressing the climate challenge at its source – by cutting emissions,” the report from the Climate Council said. The council is an independen­tly funded non-profit that replaced the Climate Commission, a publicly funded agency abolished in 2013 by the newly elected conservati­ve government in which Morrison was a Cabinet minister.

The report ranked Australia last among 31 wealthy, developed countries on the criteria of emissions reduction performanc­es and pledges.

Britain was first, followed by Switzerlan­d and Sweden. The United States was 23rd.

Australia was tied for last with Canada in terms of fossil fuel extraction and use. Next from the bottom was Norway, then the United States. The Czech Republic came first with Sweden and Switzerlan­d sharing second place.

Major emitters including China, India and Russia were not included in the tables.

Morrison is unlikely to persuade his colleagues to agree to a more ambitious 2030 target before he goes to Glasgow.

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