The Phnom Penh Post

Climate change: An unstoppabl­e movement takes hold

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ON THE eve of last month’s UN Climate Action Summit, young women and men around the world mobilised by the millions and told global leaders: “You are failing us.”

They are right.

Global emissions are increasing. Temperatur­es are rising.

The consequenc­es for oceans, forests, weather patterns, biodiversi­ty, food production, water, jobs and, ultimately, lives, are already dire – and set to get much worse.

The science is undeniable. But in many places, people don’t need a chart or graph to understand the climate crisis. They can simply look out the window.

Climate chaos is playing out in real time from California to the Caribbean, and from Africa to the Arctic and beyond.

Those who contribute­d least to the problem are suffering the most. I have seen it with my own eyes from cyclone-battered Mozambique to the hurricane-devastated Bahamas to the rising seas of the South Pacific.

I called the Climate Action Summit to serve as a springboar­d to set us on the right path ahead of crucial 2020 deadlines establishe­d by the Paris Agreement on climate change.

And many leaders– from many countries and sectors – stepped up.

A broad coalition – not just government­s and youth, but businesses, cities, investors and civil society – came together to move in the direction our world so desperatel­y needs to avert climate catastroph­e.

More than 70 countries committed to net zero carbon emissions by 2050, even if major emitters have not yet done so. More than 100 cities did the same, including several of the world’s largest.

At least 70 countries announced their intention to boost their national plans under the Paris agreement by 2020.

Small Island States together committed to achieve carbon neutrality and to move to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2030. Countries from Pakistan to Guatemala, Colombia to Nigeria, New Zealand to Barbados vowed to plant more than 11 billion trees.

More than 100 leaders in the private sector committed to accelerati­ng their move into the green economy.

A group of the world’s largest assetowner­s – responsibl­e for directing more than $2 trillion – pledged to move to carbon-neutral investment portfolios by 2050.

This is in addition to a recent call by asset managers representi­ng nearly half the world’s invested capital – some $34 trillion – for global leaders to put a meaningful price on carbon and phase out fossil-fuel subsidies and thermal coal power worldwide.

The Internatio­nal Developmen­t Finance Club pledged to mobilise $1 trillion in clean energy funding by 2025 in 20 least developed countries.

One-third of the global banking sector signed up to align their businesses with the Paris agreement objectives and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

The summit also showcased ways in which cities and global industries like shipping can achieve major reductions in emissions.

Initiative­s to protect forests and safeguard water supplies were also highlighte­d. These steps are all important – but they are not sufficient.

From the beginning, the summit was designed to jolt the world and accelerate action on a wider scale.

It also served as a global stage for hard truths and to shine a light on those who are leading and those who are not. Deniers or major emitters have nowhere to hide.

I will continue to encourage them to do much more at home and drive green economic solutions around the world.

Our planet needs action on a truly planetary scale. That cannot be achieved overnight, and it cannot happen without the full engagement of those contributi­ng most to the crisis. dollars in giveaways of hard-earned taxpayers’ money to a dying fossil-fuel industry to boost hurricanes, spread tropical diseases and heighten conflict.

At the same time, developed countries must fulfil their commitment to provide $100 billion a year from public and private sources by 2020 for mitigation and adaptation in developing countries.

And I will make sure that the commitment­s that countries, the private sector and local authoritie­s have made are accounted for – starting in December at the UN Climate conference in Santiago, Chile.

The UN is united in support of realising these initiative­s.

Climate change is the defining issue of our time. Science tells us that on our current path, we face at least three degrees Celsius of global heating by the end of the century.

I will not be there, but my granddaugh­ters will. I refuse to be an accomplice in the destructio­n of their one and only home.

Young people, the UN – and a growing number of leaders from business, finance, government and civil society – in short, many of us – are mobilising and acting.

But we need many others to take climate action if we are to succeed.

We have a long way to go – but the movement has begun.

 ?? RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP ?? People march along Reforma Avenue in Mexico City on September 20 as part of the ‘Friday for the Planet’ global demonstrat­ion against climate change.
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP People march along Reforma Avenue in Mexico City on September 20 as part of the ‘Friday for the Planet’ global demonstrat­ion against climate change.

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