The Phnom Penh Post

New York the global epicentre of climate fight for next two weeks

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ENVIRONMEN­TALISTS from around the world converge this week on New York for protests and an unpreceden­ted youth summit aimed at pressuring global leaders at the UN to ramp up their carbon reduction commitment­s.

The headline event takes place September 23 when UN SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres will likely re-state four key demands: quit new coal by 2020, achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, deliver enhanced climate plans next year and end fossil fuel subsidies.

Ahead of that, though, students from New York’s more than 1,700 schools will pour into the streets of America’s biggest city for this Friday’s global climate strike, joined by potentiall­y millions of others worldwide, including employees from major companies such as Amazon and trade unionists.

And on Saturday, Swedish campaigner Greta Thunberg, along with 500 other teen activists, will convene for the first ever Youth Climate Summit at the UN headquarte­rs, a testament to the growing power of a movement that has succeeded in popularisi­ng the term “climate emergency” over the past year.

That phrase has been taken up by Guterres, who has called Monday’s main summit because the world’s major polluters remain far behind their pledges in the 2015 Paris Agreement to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions enough to prevent climate catastroph­e.

The secretary-general “has been very clear that he’s asking countries to come to New York next week not to give flowery speeches, but to have concrete plans for how they intend to bring their national commitment­s in line with the science”, Alden Meyer, director of strategy and policy for the Union of Concerned Scientists, said.

The Paris Agreement saw countries pledge to limit the rise in the average temperatur­e of the Earth to two degrees Celsius over preindustr­ial levels, and if possible 1.5 degrees Celsius.

To meet the most ambitious, the world must achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, and greenhouse gas emissions need to fall starting next year, according to a landmark report issued last October by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

The numbers so far are bleak. Carbon dioxide emissions were their highest ever level in 2018; July 2019 was the hottest month in history, and the last four years have been the Earth’s hottest on record.

Meanwhile, Nasa data showed ice at both poles shrank to the lowest ever levels in 2019.

According to Meyer, some 60 or so countries have indicated they intend to announce that they will enhance their climate commitment­s under the Paris Agreement.

Crucially, however, these don’t include the major emitters – the countries of the Group of 20 which collective­ly represent over 80 per cent of global emissions.

“This is a marathon, not a sprint,” Meyer said. “Monday is not the be all and end all, though it’s a very important political moment.”

The US will be on the sidelines of the summit after announcing its withdrawal from the Paris Agreement in 2017 under the leadership of US President Donald Trump – but remains a signatory until November 4, 2020, a day after the next presidenti­al election.

Countries such as Bra zil under t he leadership of Ja ir Bolsona ro a re pressing f ul l speed a head wit h deforestat ion pla ns while Aust ra lia is committing to more coa l ex t ract ion.

Others, like China, the EU, and Canada, have signaled they are committed, but their actions have so far fallen well short of their rhetoric.

At the moment, only Morocco and Gambia have “compatible” commitment­s with the objective of the 2015 Paris Agreement, according to the World Resource Institute’s Climate Action Tracker.

That hasn’t deterred the optimism of many of the youth activists participat­ing in Saturday’s summit.

“Greta has opened a door,” Come Girschig, a 24-year-old from France, said. But, he added, he was eager for the movement to develop concrete proposals.

“It’s very good that the youth are mobilised on the streets, calling themselves anti-capitalist­s, and wanting to change the system, but what do we replace it with?”

The summits also come at a time when there is increasing recognitio­n that climate change is a human rights issue, Amnesty Internatio­nal chief Kumi Naidoo said.

“We have to be very clear that the biggest intergener­ational violation of human rights is what we are seeing right now with the current adult political and business leadership are governing as if we don’t have children and grandchild­ren coming after us,” he said.

“Climate change threatens the very ability of human beings to exist on this planet and with no human beings are no human rights.”

 ?? JOHANNES EISELE/AFP ?? Children paint waves on paper in New York City as they take part in an event to make art for the Youth Climate Strike on September 20.
JOHANNES EISELE/AFP Children paint waves on paper in New York City as they take part in an event to make art for the Youth Climate Strike on September 20.

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