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Friday, March 14, 2025

UN Sec Gen: COP26 a big test world leaders can’t afford to fail

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1232 days ago
20211028
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, as he addressed a high-level meeting on climate action, on Tuesday 26 October 2021. (Image courtesy United Nations)

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, as he addressed a high-level meeting on climate action, on Tuesday 26 October 2021. (Image courtesy United Nations)

An­tónio Guter­res, the Sec­re­tary Gen­er­al of the Unit­ed Na­tions, has warned world lead­ers that they can­not af­ford to fail the big test they are fac­ing at COP26, the UN Cli­mate Con­fer­ence be­ing held in Glas­gow be­tween 31 Oc­to­ber and 12 No­vem­ber 2021.

The Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al says the peo­ple of this plan­et can­not af­ford con­tin­ued in­ac­tion by their lead­ers on the is­sue of cli­mate change, es­pe­cial­ly as:

“…tem­per­a­tures every­where are reach­ing new highs; bio­di­ver­si­ty is reach­ing new lows; oceans are warm­ing, acid­i­fy­ing and chok­ing with plas­tic waste. In­creas­ing tem­per­a­tures will make vast stretch­es of our plan­et dead zones for hu­man­i­ty by cen­tu­ry’s end.”

Mr Guter­res sounds the alarm bell to world lead­ers in an open ed­i­to­r­i­al ti­tled, “The Glas­gow Cli­mate Test”, and re­minds them:

"There is one path for­ward.  A 1.5-de­gree fu­ture is the on­ly vi­able fu­ture for hu­man­i­ty.”

The fol­low­ing is the full text of the Open Ed­i­to­r­i­al is­sued by Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al Guter­res…

 

The Glas­gow Cli­mate Test

by AN­TÓNIO GUTER­RES, Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al of the Unit­ed Na­tions

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, as he addressed a high-level meeting on climate action, on Tuesday 26 October 2021. (Image courtesy United Nations)

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, as he addressed a high-level meeting on climate action, on Tuesday 26 October 2021. (Image courtesy United Nations)

 

The cli­mate cri­sis is a code red for hu­man­i­ty.

World lead­ers will soon be put to the test at the UN Cli­mate Con­fer­ence — known as COP26 — in Glas­gow.

Their ac­tions — or in­ac­tions — will show their se­ri­ous­ness about ad­dress­ing this plan­e­tary emer­gency.

The warn­ing signs are hard to miss: tem­per­a­tures every­where are reach­ing new highs; bio­di­ver­si­ty is reach­ing new lows; oceans are warm­ing, acid­i­fy­ing and chok­ing with plas­tic waste. In­creas­ing tem­per­a­tures will make vast stretch­es of our plan­et dead zones for hu­man­i­ty by cen­tu­ry’s end.

And the re­spect­ed med­ical jour­nal The Lancet just de­scribed cli­mate change as the “defin­ing nar­ra­tive of hu­man health” in the years to come — a cri­sis de­fined by wide­spread hunger, res­pi­ra­to­ry ill­ness, dead­ly dis­as­ters and in­fec­tious dis­ease out­breaks that could be even worse than COVID-19.

De­spite these alarm bells ring­ing at fever pitch, we see new ev­i­dence in the lat­est UN re­ports that gov­ern­ments’ ac­tions so far sim­ply do not add up to what is so des­per­ate­ly need­ed.

Re­cent new an­nounce­ments for cli­mate ac­tion are wel­come and crit­i­cal — but even so, our world is on track for calami­tous glob­al tem­per­a­ture ris­es well above 2 de­grees Cel­sius.

This is a far cry from the 1.5-de­gree Cel­sius tar­get to which the world agreed un­der the Paris Agree­ment – a tar­get that sci­ence tells us is the on­ly sus­tain­able path­way for our world.

This tar­get is en­tire­ly achiev­able. 

If we can re­duce glob­al emis­sions by 45 per cent com­pared to 2010 lev­els this decade.

If we can achieve glob­al net-ze­ro by 2050.

And if world lead­ers ar­rive in Glas­gow with bold, am­bi­tious and ver­i­fi­able 2030 tar­gets, and new, con­crete poli­cies to re­verse this dis­as­ter.

Image courtesy United Nations.

Image courtesy United Nations.

G20 lead­ers — in par­tic­u­lar — need to de­liv­er.

The time has passed for diplo­mat­ic niceties.

If gov­ern­ments — es­pe­cial­ly G20 gov­ern­ments — do not stand up and lead this ef­fort, we are head­ed for ter­ri­ble hu­man suf­fer­ing.

But all coun­tries need to re­al­ize that the old, car­bon-burn­ing mod­el of de­vel­op­ment is a death sen­tence for their economies and our plan­et.

We need de­car­boniza­tion now, across every sec­tor in every coun­try. We need to shift sub­si­dies from fos­sil fu­els to re­new­able en­er­gy, and tax pol­lu­tion, not peo­ple.  We need to put a price on car­bon, and chan­nel that back to­wards re­silient in­fra­struc­tures and jobs. 

And we need to phase-out coal — by 2030 in OECD coun­tries and 2040 in all oth­ers. In­creas­ing num­bers of gov­ern­ments have pledged to stop fi­nanc­ing coal — and pri­vate fi­nance needs to do the same, ur­gent­ly.

Peo­ple right­ly ex­pect their gov­ern­ments to lead. But we all have a re­spon­si­bil­i­ty to safe­guard our col­lec­tive fu­ture. 

Busi­ness­es need to re­duce their cli­mate im­pact, and ful­ly and cred­i­bly align their op­er­a­tions and fi­nan­cial flows to a net-ze­ro fu­ture. No more ex­cus­es; no more green­wash­ing.

In­vestors — pub­lic and pri­vate alike — must do the same. They should join front run­ners like the net-ze­ro as­set own­ers al­liance, and the UN’s own pen­sion fund, which met its 2021 car­bon re­duc­tion in­vest­ment ob­jec­tives ahead of time and above its tar­get, with a 32 per cent re­duc­tion this year.

In­di­vid­u­als in every so­ci­ety need to make bet­ter, more re­spon­si­ble choic­es in what they eat, how they trav­el, and what they buy.  

And young peo­ple — and cli­mate ac­tivists — need to keep do­ing what they’re do­ing: de­mand­ing ac­tion from their lead­ers and keep­ing them ac­count­able.

Through­out, we need glob­al sol­i­dar­i­ty to help all coun­tries make this shift.  De­vel­op­ing coun­tries are grap­pling with debt and liq­uid­i­ty crises. They need sup­port.

Pub­lic and mul­ti­lat­er­al de­vel­op­ment banks must sig­nif­i­cant­ly in­crease their cli­mate port­fo­lios and in­ten­si­fy their ef­forts to help coun­tries tran­si­tion to net-ze­ro, re­silient economies. The de­vel­oped world must ur­gent­ly meet its com­mit­ment of at least $100 bil­lion in an­nu­al cli­mate fi­nance for de­vel­op­ing coun­tries.

Donors and mul­ti­lat­er­al de­vel­op­ment banks to al­lo­cate at least half their cli­mate fi­nance to­wards adap­ta­tion and re­silience.

The Unit­ed Na­tions was found­ed 76 years ago to build con­sen­sus for ac­tion against the great­est threats fac­ing hu­man­i­ty.  But rarely have we faced a cri­sis like this one – a tru­ly ex­is­ten­tial cri­sis that — if not ad­dressed — threat­ens not on­ly us, but fu­ture gen­er­a­tions.

There is one path for­ward.  A 1.5-de­gree fu­ture is the on­ly vi­able fu­ture for hu­man­i­ty.

Lead­ers must get on with the job in Glas­gow, be­fore it’s too late.

___

An­tónio Guter­res is Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al of the Unit­ed Na­tions

EnvironmentUnited Nations


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