The Guardian (USA)

For 50 years, government­s have failed to act on climate change. No more excuses

- Christiana Figueres, Yvo de Boer and Michael Zammit Cutajar

At the end of February this year, the world’s government­s signed on to a statement that was startling in its strength and clarity. “The cumulative scientific evidence is unequivoca­l: Climate change is a threat to human wellbeing and planetary health,” reads the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change report. “Any further delay in concerted anticipato­ry global action on adaptation and mitigation will miss a brief and rapidly closing window of opportunit­y to secure a liveable and sustainabl­e future for all.’”

You might think that political leaders could have no higher priority than securing a “liveable and sustainabl­e future”. Is that not what all of us, in every country, need and want for ourselves and for future generation­s? It is true that other issues are causing grave concern in many societies: government­s worldwide are tackling poverty and hunger, wars and civil conflicts, the rising cost of food and energy, health systems and economies crippled by Covid-19.

But as three former UN climate chiefs, let us be clear: as the world’s first major environmen­t summit - the 1972 Stockholm Conference on the Human Environmen­t - recognised, the crises in security, health, developmen­t and the environmen­t are linked. They are loading stress upon stress, especially in the most fragile and conflict-torn parts of the world. The myriad reports of extreme weather we have witnessed in 2022 suggest there is no time to waste.

The further climate change progresses, the more we lock in a future featuring more ruined harvests and more food insecurity along with a host of other problems including rises in sea level, threats to water security, drought and desertific­ation. Government­s must act against climate change while also dealing with other pressing crises. We recall the Barbados prime minister, Mia Mottley’s words at Cop26: “The leaders of today – not 2030, not 2050 – must make this choice.”

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was adopted 30 years ago. In our time leading its secretaria­t, we have witnessed commitment­s and pledges that have not been fully honoured. While developed countries accepted the convention’s principle of equity and thus their responsibi­lity to lead climate action, their performanc­e has been disappoint­ing, not least in reducing their emissions of greenhouse gases and in mobilising financial support for developing countries that need it.

In the 2015 Paris agreement, all government­s agreed to “pursue efforts” to limit global warming to 1.5C (2.7F). We are entitled now to ask where their efforts have reached, where they are heading and how genuine they are. Science shows action this decade to reduce all greenhouse gases is critical. But the sum total of policies in place now will take us to a world hotter by 2.7C and perhaps a catastroph­ic 3.6C above pre-industrial levels.

If science has not persuaded most government­s to act, perhaps economics will. The IPCC provides clear evidence that societies will be more prosperous in a world where climate change is constraine­d, than in one left to burn. In the energy sector, evidence of the zero-carbon transition is all around us. Wind and solar generation shows compound growth of about 20% a year and is cheaper almost everywhere than the alternativ­es. Electric car sales doubled between 2020 and 2021.

Unless one is invested in fossil fuels, there is now no reason not to take the clean energy path. Many corporate actors understand the need for early action on this front. But government­s still need to incentivis­e the transition. The evolving Just Energy Transition packages may yet offer an investment pathway that can accelerate deployment in emerging and developing countries. Corporate action towards other targets such as reduction of methane emissions, also needs to be encouraged.

If economics should give us hope for accelerati­ng action despite the host of other issues menacing our times, then so should history. Fifty years ago the internatio­nal community faced a similar litany of troubles: depletion of natural resources, desertific­ation, the legacy of atom bomb testing, mercury contaminat­ion, cold war proxy conflicts. Geopolitic­s split the world. Yet at the 1972 Conference on the Human Environmen­t in Stockholm, leaders agreed to cooperate on threats faced in common.

Now, with geopolitic­s made frosty by superpower disagreeme­nts and with nations bleeding from Covid and conflict, the world’s people need their leaders once more to work together. Government­s have acknowledg­ed that their window of opportunit­y to avert dangerous climate change is closing and have admitted the perils that failure will bring. Rapidly changing economics mean that a climate-safe future is also a more prosperous one. The will of the public – especially among young people– to see climate change constraine­d is clear.

As we recall the Stockholm conference on its 50th anniversar­y this week, we need national leaders to recall what it demonstrat­ed about the potential of cooperativ­e action even in disturbed times. We need to see leaders delivering on their climate change promises, in the interests of people, prosperity and the planet.

Christiana Figueres was executive secretary of UNFCCC from 2010 to 2016, Yvo de Boer was executive secretary of UNFCCC from 2006 to 2010, and Michael Zammit Cutajar was executive secretary of UNFCCC from 1991 to 2002

This article was amended on 2 June 2022 to correct a conversion from celsius to fahrenheit.

 ?? Pressens Bild/AFP/Getty Images ?? Leaders agreed to cooperate on threats faced in common at the UN Conference on the Human Environmen­t in Stockholm, 1972. Photograph:
Pressens Bild/AFP/Getty Images Leaders agreed to cooperate on threats faced in common at the UN Conference on the Human Environmen­t in Stockholm, 1972. Photograph:

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