The Phnom Penh Post

‘US ranks last in climate fight’

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THE US and Saudi Arabia rank last when it comes to curbing climate change among the 56 nations accounting for 90 per cent of planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, researcher­s said on Monday.

A large number of laggards means the world is dangerousl­y off-track when it comes to slashing t he carbon pollution t hat has a lready amplified droughts, flooding and deadly heat waves worldwide, they reported on the margins of UN climate ta lks in Katowice, Poland.

“Only a few countries have started to implement strategies to limit globa l warming well below 2 degrees Celsius,” the cornerston­e ta rget of t he 2015 Paris climate treat y, according to NewClimate Institute and Germanwatc­h, an NGO.

Most government­s “lack the political will to phase out fossil fuels with the necessary speed”.

Global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), which accounts for 80 per cent of global warming, will climb nearly three per cent by year’s end, scientists confirmed last week.

After holding steady from 2014 through 2016 – raising hopes that humanity had turned a corner on climate change – carbon pollution started to climb again last year, driven by increased use of oil, gas and coal.

A major UN report in October concluded that CO2 emission levels must drop a quarter within 12 years to stay under 2C, and by half over the same period to cap warming at 1.5C, seen as a safer guardrail against catastroph­ic extreme weather.

Sweden and Morocco scored highest in the annual ranking, the sur vey showed, wit h Britain, India, Nor way, Portuga l and the EU as a whole in the top tranche as well.

The three-place podium, however, was left empty because no countr y’s policies and actions were deemed suf ficient, it said.

Fossil fuel lock-in

Other nations at t he bottom of t he l ist included Iran, South Korea, Austra lia, Canada, Russia, Turkey and Japan.

In determinin­g a score, the Climate Change Performanc­e Index looked at each country’s progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, building up renewable energy such as wind and solar, energy use, and its climate policies.

On current trends, the world is on track to heat up four or five degrees Celsius by century’s end.

National pledges to cut carbon pollution annexed to the Paris Agreement – i f f ulfilled – would still see t he globa l thermomete­r rise by more than 3C, a recipe for climate chaos, according to scientists.

Eart h’s average surface temperatur­e has risen by about 1C since the mid-19th centur y.

“The costs of elect ricit y from wind and solar have dropped by roughly a third since the Paris Agreement, so a ll countries can increase ambition and pace,” said co-author Nik las Hohne, a professor at the NewClimate Institute.

In 40 of the 56 countries surveyed, emissions went down between 2011 and 2016.

At the same time, however, investment in fossi l f uel infrastruc­ture – and t he risk of being locked into a high-emissions f uture – increased.

US President Donald Trump has dismantled many of the climate change policies of his predecesso­r, Barack Obama.

He has also promoted the use of fossil fuels and tried to unwind more stringent fuel standards for vehicles.

The US might have ranked last but for the ambitious climate policies of California and other states, the report said.

India’s ranking, 11, improved due to a rapid installati­on of solar energy, a low per capita carbon footprint, and relatively aggressive targets for reducing emissions.

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