女生小视频

Environment

COP26 news: Draft text calls for phasing out coal and fossil fuels

The first COP26 draft statement was released, with an acknowledgment of the role of fossil fuels in climate change. Plus, 24 countries and several car-makers pledged to end the sale of cars run on fossil fuels by 2040

By Michael Marshall, Richard Webb and Adam Vaughan

10 November 2021

Electric car charging in street, London, England, UK

Electric car charging on a street in London

Chris Howes/Wild Places Photography / Alamy

Sign up for Today at COP26, our free daily briefing on all the latest news and analysis from the crucial climate summit

Just before 6am UK time, the first draft of the COP26 final statement was released. It was expected to come out around midnight, but instead, the negotiators had to work through the night. The text gives us our first concrete notion of what the world鈥檚 governments will agree to this week. Of course, it is still a draft, and the final version may look significantly different. But let鈥檚 take a look at what we have.

 

Fossil fuels! It鈥檚 the fossil fuels! OMG!

New 女生小视频鈥檚 Adam Vaughan and has summarised what is in the text. He highlights several key points.

First, 鈥渃alls upon Parties to accelerate the phasing-out of coal and subsidies for fossil fuels鈥. That’s remarkable for one simple reason: it explicitly mentions fossil fuels. at the European Climate Foundation in the Netherlands that analysts reckon this is the 鈥渇irst time fossil fuels have been called out in a draft UN #climate decision text鈥 鈥 鈥 and called it 鈥渁 moment鈥.

鈥淲e鈥檝e never had a text like that before in the COP, a reference specifically to phasing out fossil fuel subsidies or to phasing out coal,鈥 at the World Resources Institute, .

To readers out there in the normal world, this may seem utterly bizarre. Climate change is driven in large part by our use of fossil fuels and the greenhouse gases they release. Obviously. And yet in the topsy-turvy world of international diplomacy, many countries have simply refused to formally commit to this basic fact. It would be possible to write quite a long book exploring the psychological, economic and political reasons for that 鈥 but the fact is they haven鈥檛 said it before. If this line makes it into the final document, for the first time all the world鈥檚 governments will have admitted that fossil fuels are the problem.

The symbolic value of this one line is potentially quite significant. But of course, symbolic acts only matter if they prompt people to do meaningful things 鈥 otherwise they don鈥檛 amount to anything more than 鈥溾. Is there anything practical in there?

 

Revisiting pledges

Probably the most useful bit of the text concerns emissions pledges. Many countries have made commitments to cut their greenhouse gas emissions by so many percentage points by some future date. The text calls on them to 鈥渞evisit and strengthen鈥 their 2030 climate plans . Previously, they weren鈥檛 expected to put forward new plans until 2025, so these new plans would come a whole three years early 鈥 and would relate to emissions this decade rather than after 2030.

That鈥檚 complicated, so let鈥檚 boil it down. This bit of text pushes countries to make plans, before the end of next year, to cut emissions this decade. That鈥檚 crucial, because as we have noted before, while many countries have committed themselves to hit net-zero emissions this century, in most cases they haven鈥檛 followed up with plans for emissions cuts this decade. If governments put forward , for action before 2030, it would help fill that crucial gap.

Of course, the big issue here is that the text only 鈥渦rges鈥 governments to do this. It doesn鈥檛 compel them. So even if this text survives the next few days of negotiations, it won鈥檛 be in any way legally binding. We will have to rely on governments feeling a sense of obligation, or perhaps shame, for the text to matter.

Given all this hedging, it will come as no surprise that many are disappointed. Rupert Read, a former spokesperson for eco-activism group Extinction Rebellion, called the text 鈥溾. Similarly, Jennifer Morgan at Greenpeace said it was 鈥溾.

Meanwhile, a group of 14 teenagers, disillusioned with the COP26 process, have launched calling on the United Nations to declare a 鈥渟ystem-wide climate emergency鈥. , the group includes Greta Thunberg plus Ranton Anjain and Litokne Kabua from the Marshall Islands, Ridhima Pandey from India, Alexandria Villase帽or from the US and Ayakha Melithafa from South Africa. Their hope is that such a declaration would prompt the UN to send resources to countries vulnerable to climate change.

It is understandable that the teenagers are so utterly done with the international negotiations and are trying to do an end run around them. In 2021, after 26 of these climate change summits, the language of the draft agreement is still wishy-washy.

 

Clean cars

In other news, cars powered by fossil fuels are on the way out 鈥 sort of.聽

The UK government today that 鈥渁ll new heavy goods vehicles in the UK will be zero-emission by 2040鈥. Because the government has already made similar commitments about other classes of vehicle, this means that all new road vehicles in the UK will have to be zero emission by 2040.

On a larger scale, a coalition of 24 countries and several leading car firms have agreed to end the sale of new fossil fuel cars by 2040.

The list of countries includes Canada, Israel and the UK 鈥 but doesn’t include several nations with massive car industries, . There are also long lists of cities, fleet owners and investors that have signed on. The car manufacturers involved include Mercedes-Benz, Ford and General Motors. But again, there are many key absences, notably BMW, Volkswagen and Toyota.

Still, the coalition is substantial as it is, and may well grow. What is more worrying is the woolliness of the language. For instance, the governments commit to 鈥渨ork towards all sales of new cars and vans being zero emission by 2040 or earlier, or by no later than 2035 in leading markets鈥. Notice the use of 鈥渨ork towards鈥, as opposed to 鈥渆nsure鈥. Also, if you scroll to the very bottom of , you will find a teeny-tiny footnote that reads: 鈥淲e will make clear this declaration is not legally binding and focused on a global level鈥. To which one can only say 鈥渙h鈥.

Nevertheless, at the UN Environment Programme, told New 女生小视频鈥檚 Richard Webb that, despite these caveats, this represents a real turning point. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a fantastic development, it鈥檚 an impressive list,鈥 he says, adding that he thinks more will sign up soon.

 

What to watch for

Climate finance: that is, money flowing from developed countries to developing and emerging economies to help them both cut emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change. COP26 president Alok Sharma has pronounced himself 鈥溾 with the commitments made so far, noting that contributions to the Least Developed Countries Fund have topped $410 million and contributions to the Adaptation Fund have reached over $350 million. Once again, a reminder that all the way back in 2009, rich countries promised $100 billion a year by 2020 and . In 2019, . Sharma has a long way to go to get the finance flowing as it is supposed to.

 

Quote of the day

鈥.鈥 Teenage climate activist Alexandria Villase帽or of , once again on point. As this edition of the newsletter makes clear, the texts produced by international climate summits often fail to admit even basic facts 鈥 and governments have broken many of the promises they have made to each other.

Topics:

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox. We'll also keep you up to date with New 女生小视频 events and special offers.

Sign up
Piano Exit Overlay Banner Mobile Piano Exit Overlay Banner Desktop