Hartford Courant (Sunday)

US envoy: Climate summit can yield ‘enormous progress’

- By Colleen Barry

MILAN — U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said Saturday he thinks “enormous progress” can be made at upcoming U.N. climate talks in Scotland but more government­s must come up with concrete commitment­s in the next 30 days.

Kerry attended a preparator­y meeting in Milan where delegates from around the world sought to identify where progress can be made before the U.N. Climate Change Conference of the Parties starts in Glasgow on Oct. 31.

The 12-day summit aims to secure more ambitious commitment­s to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius with a goal of keeping it to 1.5 degrees Celsius compared to preindustr­ial levels. The event also is focused on mobilizing financing and protecting vulnerable communitie­s and natural habitats.

“The bottom line is, folks, as we stand here today, we believe we can make enormous progress in Glasgow, moving rapidly towards the new goals that the science is telling us we must achieve,” Kerry said. That means achieving a 45% reduction in carbon emissions in the next 10 years.

“This is the decisive decade,” Kerry said.

Kerry, a former U.S. senator and secretary of state, said that countries representi­ng 55% of the world’s gross domestic product — Britain, Canada, Japan, the United States and the 27 European Union members — have submitted plans that hit the 1.5 degrees target by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

But the American diplomat also noted that the 89 new national submission­s ahead of the summit would only cut emissions by 12%, and that the sum of all 191 submission­s as they are currently written would increase emissions between now and 2030 by 16%.

Kerry declined to single out any country but said that there are ways to achieve lower emissions that aren’t that expensive, including organizing power grids and making transmissi­ons more efficient.

China is the world’s biggest emitter, and the United States is second. Kerry said U.S. President Joe Biden has had “constructi­ve” talks on the subject with Chinese President Xi Jinping. Kerry also highlighte­d commitment­s by India’s leader to install 450 gigawatts of renewable power over the next decade.

“Glasgow, my friends, is around the corner. It is the starting line of the race of centuries and the race of this decade,” he said. “All countries have to sprint and join together to understand that we are all in this together.” Kerry said, adding: “This is the test of collective multilater­alism to the highest level that I have seen in my public career.”

The European commission­er for climate action, Frans Timmermans, separately underlined the importance of meeting the $100 billion annual funding commitment for especially vulnerable countries during 2020-25 that youth activists who met earlier in Milan pressed for.

Timmermans said the financing needs going forward would draft that amount and that public funding alone would not be able to cover the anticipate­d price tag, which runs in the trillions.

“We need to change, and we need to change radically and we need to change fast. That’s going to be ... hard. That’s the bad news,” Timmermans said.

 ?? AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? U.S. Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry wants to persuade world leaders to “do what the science tells us” when it comes to emissions.
AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES U.S. Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry wants to persuade world leaders to “do what the science tells us” when it comes to emissions.

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