The Guardian (USA)

Cop28: King Charles warns of ‘vast, frightenin­g experiment’ on natural world

- Fiona Harvey, Nina Lakhani, Aletha Adu, Damian Carrington, Patrick Greenfield and Oliver Milman in Dubai

The world has embarked on a “vast, frightenin­g experiment” on the natural world, King Charles has told world leaders, which risks triggering “feedback loops” in the climate system that will cause irreversib­le disaster.

Noting that 2023 was the hottest year on record, the king told the Cop28 UN climate summit on Friday: “Records are now being broken so often that we are perhaps becoming immune to what they are really telling us. We need to pause to process what this actually means: we are taking the natural world outside balanced norms and limits, and into dangerous, uncharted territory.”

In an opening speech calling on leaders to make Cop28 “a critical turning point”, he warned: “We are carrying out a vast, frightenin­g experiment of changing every ecological condition, all at once, at a pace that far outstrips nature’s ability to cope … Our choice is now a starker, and darker, one: how dangerous are we actually prepared to make our world?”

More than 130 heads of state and government have gathered in Dubai for the opening days of a two-week summit at which nations are aiming to chart a path for the world to avoid breaching the global heating limit of 1.5C (2.7F) above pre-industrial­ised temperatur­es.

António Guterres, the secretary general of the UN, said the world was “miles” from fulfilling the Paris agreement, and only “minutes to midnight” when it came to the 1.5C goal. He insisted that leaders could still make a difference if they exercised “political will”.

“It is not too late,” he told them. “You can prevent planetary crash and burn. We have the technologi­es to avoid the worst of climate chaos – if we act now.”

More countries came forward on Friday with contributi­ons to a fund for loss and damage, announced on the first day, which will help rescue and rehabilita­te vulnerable countries stricken by climate disaster. Some developing countries told the Guardian the $420m of finance so far agreed was not all it seemed, with some funding appearing to be repurposed from existing aid and some taking the form of loans. Saudi Arabia was also rumoured to be considerin­g contributi­ng to the fund, which would be a first for the oil-producing state.

World leaders signed a declaratio­n on transformi­ng food systems – the first Cop resolution that directly tackles the symbiotic relationsh­ip between what people eat and the changing climate. The resolution recognises that “unpreceden­ted adverse climate impacts are increasing­ly threatenin­g the resilience of agricultur­e and food systems as well as the ability of many, especially the most vulnerable, to produce and access food in the face of mounting hunger, malnutriti­on and economic stresses”.

More than 100 countries signed the declaratio­n and committed to including food and land use in their climate plans by 2025. The declaratio­n was widely welcomed by small-scale and indigenous farmers – who produce a third of the world’s food – as well as food rights campaigner­s, consumer associatio­ns and small business groups.

A UN report warned that droughts supercharg­ed by global heating were “an unpreceden­ted emergency on a planetary scale”, leading to food shortages and famine.

While other climate impacts, such as heatwaves, wildfires and floods, often hit the headlines, droughts were often silent disasters, the report said, and “the massive impacts of humaninduc­ed droughts are only starting to unfold”.

The report said those who had done the least to cause the climate crisis were the most exposed: 85% of those affected by droughts live in low- or middle-income countries.

“Several countries already experience climate change-induced famine,” said the report by the UN Convention to

Combat Desertific­ation. “Forced migration surges globally; violent water conflicts are on the rise; the ecological base that enables all life on Earth is eroding more quickly than at any time in known human history.”

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s president, called for more support from developed countries. “The planet is fed up with unfulfille­d climate agreements. Government­s cannot escape their responsibi­lities,” he told the conference. “No country will solve its problems alone. We are all obliged to act together beyond our borders.”

He told delegates that the trillions of dollars spent on weapons should be used instead against hunger, inequality and climate change: “The world has naturalise­d unacceptab­le disparitie­s in income, gender and race, and it is not possible to face climate change without combating inequality.”

He spoke of climate suffering in the Amazon, which is experienci­ng one of the “most tragic droughts in its history”, while cyclones in the south of Brazil had left a trail of “destructio­n and death”.

Brazil’s energy minister announced on Thursday that the country would align more closely with the world’s biggest oil cartel, Opec, but Lula said it was necessary to “work for an economy less dependent on fossil fuels”.

William Ruto, the president of Kenya, said his region was also facing the horrific effects of climate breakdown. “In eastern Africa, catastroph­ic flooding has followed the most severe drought the region has seen in over 40 years,” he said, adding that the extreme weather this year had “seized lives and destroyed communitie­s” as well as infrastruc­ture and supply chains.

He said the world needed to invest in green energy and other infrastruc­ture in Africa. “A tendency to ignore Africa’s developmen­tal and industrial needs … is no longer a tenable position,” he said. “Turning Africa into a green powerhouse is not just essential for the continent, it is also vital for global industrial­isation and decarbonis­ation.”

Rishi Sunak, the UK prime minister, is at the conference, along with European heads of state including France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, and the EU Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and leaders of developing countries including India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi.

Sunak told the conference “the mounting science and evidence of climate-related disasters prove we are not moving fast enough” and said that “everyone can do more”. But he also admitted that he had rolled back the UK’s decarbonis­ation policies, and claimed this was to reduce costs for households.

One Cop summit veteran from the UK said delegates were focused more on Sunak’s actions, particular­ly in pushing new North Sea oil and gas licences, than on his words.

“It doesn’t matter what Sunak says today,” they said. “We used to be a climate leader. Now we are going backwards.”

World leaders will continue their meetings into the weekend, then when they depart, their negotiator­s will thrash out the final details of a deal over 10 days. Major difference­s remain to be bridged, including over a potential resolution to phase out or phase down fossil fuels, and how to ensure that the world’s biggest emitters return to the negotiatin­g table with far more stringent cuts to greenhouse gas emissions.

• Cop28: Can fossil fuel companies transition to clean energy? On Tuesday 5 December, 8pm-9.15pm GMT, join Damian Carrington, Christiana Figueres, Tessa Khan and Mike Coffin for a livestream­ed discussion on whether fossil fuel companies can transition to clean energy. Book tickets here or at theguardia­n.live

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