The Borneo Post

UK: Upcoming talks ‘last chance’ to prevent climate disaster

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LONDON: Climate summit COP26, due to take place in Glasgow in November, is “our last hope” of preventing runaway temperatur­e increase, the president of the event was to say in a major speech on Friday.

“I have faith that world leaders will rise to the occasion and not be found wanting in their tryst with destiny,” British MP Alok Sharma was set to say, according to extracts of his speech released to the media.

COP26 will bring together climate negotiator­s from 196 countries and the EU, along with businesses, experts and world leaders.

Sharma was to warn that the summit was “our last hope” of keeping temperatur­e rises below 1.5 degrees Celsius, beyond which scientists believe uncontroll­able climate change will occur.

It is also “our best chance of building a brighter future. A future of green jobs and cleaner air,” the Conservati­ve lawmaker will say.

The British government has faced calls to make the landmark event virtual due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, but has so far said it will hold it in person.

Sharma hinted the government will stick to its plan, saying in the pre-released remarks that “in six months time, when we (attendees) are packing up and going home, we will be able to say that at this critical juncture, each of us took responsibi­lity.”

COP26 was originally scheduled for November 2020 but was pushed back due to the pandemic.

There are fears that some countries will be unable to attend the talks in person due to ongoing outbreaks.

Delegates are faced with ever-more dire warnings from scientists about the scale of emissions cuts needed to keep within reach the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius – as laid out in the Paris agreement.

That deal, struck more than five years ago, committed nations to resubmit their emissions cutting plans – known as NDCs – every five years with enhanced green ambition.

Yet many of the largest emitters have so far failed to do so and countries have not even agreed on a unified rulebook governing how the Paris agreement works in practice.

The UN says that emissions must fall nearly eight percent annually to keep 1.5 degrees Celsius in play – equivalent to the emissions saved during the pandemic every single year through 2030.

Friday’s speech will have a particular focus on the world’s reliance on coal. — AFP

 ??  ?? A ball of fire engulfing the Al-Walid building which was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza city.
A ball of fire engulfing the Al-Walid building which was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza city.
 ??  ?? Rockets are seen in the night sky fired towards Israel from Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip.
Rockets are seen in the night sky fired towards Israel from Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip.

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