Strathearn Herald

We need to meet climate challenge

- MSP FOR MID SCOTLAND AND FIFE

After over two weeks of negotiatio­ns, the COP26 UN Climate summit in Glasgow came to a close, but in terms of a satisfacto­ry conclusion it has been found wanting.

Commitment­s to more ambitious carbon-cutting plans and increased support for the climate response of poorer nations are to be welcomed, but the closing statements have been undermined by the last-ditch watering down in regard to coal power.

The Prime Minister can argue that“phasing down” and“phasing out”mean much the same, but absence of firm dates or targets is a disappoint­ment and the change from a goal which was clearly defined to something far less tangible only illustrate­s how we continue to fall short.

Limiting dangerous global warming ultimately will be the only measure that matters.

The failure to deliver an agreement to get us on course to limit global temperatur­e increase to 1.5 degrees was a huge miss and one that highlights the continuing influence of fossil fuel companies, whose representa­tion at the summit outnumbere­d the delegates of any single nation.

That the pact keeps the 1.5 goal“only just”within reach has resulted in the Climate Action Tracker describing COP26 as having a massive credibilit­y, action and commitment gap.

We have to question whether the urgency of our climate crisis is being responded to as it must. In the areas where agreement has been reached there is still much to do.

Previous summits have too often resulted in a failure to deliver on promises and the translatio­n into policy is the key.

Fingers can be pointed at China, Russia and Saudi Arabia for their failure to cut emissions sooner and faster, but we must also take responsibi­lity.

In Scotland our government continues to set ambitious climate targets but fails to meet them.

It needs to do much more to provide the policies and support needed to translate the words into results, including focused actions in key sectors such energy, agricultur­e and transport.

Transport emissions have only fallen by 0.5 per cent since 1990, the pace of change in agricultur­e is far too slow and support mechanisms often support inertia, and it is a disappoint­ment that the Scottish Government failed to sign up to the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance.

We can certainly take some positives from COP26.

It did bring forward a number of new national commitment­s and multilater­al deals, including on deforestat­ion and methane reduction.

We also saw a new “ratchet”introduced whereby countries are requested to come back with more ambitious commitment­s for the next summit in Egypt.

Perhaps its greatest achievemen­t is the scale of global attention and public engagement we have seen.

A powerful movement for climate action has been demonstrat­ed and the way we talk about climate issues has changed.

With this comes increased pressure to act and to drive transforma­tional change.

We know the challenge and we need to meet it.

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 ?? ?? Taking action Demonstrat­ors took to the streets of Glasgow and elsewhere during COP26 in a bid to make their voices heard
Taking action Demonstrat­ors took to the streets of Glasgow and elsewhere during COP26 in a bid to make their voices heard

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