Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

UN chief: Govts’ inaction on climate is ‘dangerous’

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BERLIN: UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres warned on Tuesday of a “dangerous disconnect” between what scientists and citizens are demanding to curb climate crisis, and what government­s are actually doing about it.

Guterres said global greenhouse gas emissions need to drop by 45% this decade, but are currently forecast to increase by 14%.

“We are witnessing a historic and dangerous disconnect: science and citizens are demanding ambitious and transforma­tive climate action,” he said at a climate conference in Austria.

“Meanwhile many government­s are dragging their feet. This inaction has grave consequenc­es.”

Guterres said Russia’s war in Ukraine risked worsening the crisis, because major economies were “doubling down on fossil fuels” that are to blame for much of the emissions stoking global warming.

“New funding for fossil fuel exploratio­n and production infrastruc­ture is delusional,” he said in a video message to the Austrian World Summit, initiated by former California governor Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

“It will only further feed the scourge of war, pollution and climate catastroph­e.”

Guterres urged countries to instead end all coal use by 2040, with rich nations doing so by 2030, and focus on replacing fossil fuels with renewable sources of energy, such as solar and wind power.

“Renewables are the peace plan of the 21st century,” he said.

Schwarzene­gger, who has long campaigned against environmen­tal pollution, said the war in Ukraine was another reason to stop using fossil fuels.

He cited research showing that Europe paid Russia tens of billions of dollars for energy imports in the first two months of the year.

“No matter how you look at it, we have blood on our hands because we are financing the war,” said Schwarzene­gger.

“We must do whatever it takes to eliminate our addiction to fossil fuels,” he added. “We must be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Failure is no option here.”

 ?? AP/FILE ?? Emissions rise from the smokestack­s at the Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant near Emmett, Kansas, US.
AP/FILE Emissions rise from the smokestack­s at the Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant near Emmett, Kansas, US.

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