The Philippine Star

World leaders seek new path to slow warming of planet

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PARIS (Reuters) — Next week, in the waning days of what is set to be the hottest year on record, world leaders will meet on the outskirts of Paris for a summit that seeks nothing less than to steer the global economy away from its ever-growing reliance on fossil fuels.

The challenge is enormous and has proven elusive in the past.

The UN-sponsored talks are aimed at getting 195 countries to agree on a path for cutting the greenhouse gas emissions which scientists said have raised global temperatur­es and begun upending the Earth’s climate.

Opening the summit at Le Bourget on Nov. 30, heads of government from big carbon burning countries such as US President Barack Obama and China’s Xi Jinping will seek common cause with leaders from the smallest emitters in Africa and island states.

When it concludes two weeks later on Dec. 11 — give or take a couple of days for last-minute wrangling — their negotiator­s are likely to claim success in committing both rich and developing nations to weaning the world off the coal and oil resources that gave rise to the Industrial Revolution.

“Done right, it will shape the economy of the 21st century,” said Andrew Steer, head of the World Resources Institute think-tank. Done wrong, critics warn, the consequenc­es could be catastroph­ic.

For climate scientists who overwhelmi­ngly say that continuing to burn carbon even at today’s pace will raise global temperatur­es by several degrees, a weak agreement will trigger inhospitab­le changes to the Earth’s climate systems.

A hotter planet would see dire — if hard to perfectly predict — effects: rising seas, more intense storms and droughts on land and extinction for vast numbers of life forms in warmer, more acidic oceans.

Yet an array of other voices contend that severing the global economy from its foundation­s on coal, oil and gas risks unleashing pain of its own: rising energy costs that would deny the world’s poor affordable power essential to improving their lives.

Reconcilin­g those forces has stumbled in past UN-backed talks. The last attempt to strike a global agreement collapsed in rancor in Copenhagen in 2009, when a few developing countries balked at a deal they said did not go far enough in requiring industrial­ized nations to cut their emissions.

Chastened by Copenhagen and aware that another failure could dissolve any remaining appetite for collective action, expectatio­ns for Paris have been kept lower.

And the mood will be somber, amid tight security after the attacks that killed 130 people in Paris.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Eiffel Tower is seen at sunset in Paris, France Sunday. The capital will host the 2015 World Climate Change Conference from Nov. 30 to Dec. 11.
REUTERS The Eiffel Tower is seen at sunset in Paris, France Sunday. The capital will host the 2015 World Climate Change Conference from Nov. 30 to Dec. 11.

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