女生小视频

Environment

Biden urges leaders to fight for an equitable world at climate summit

US president Joe Biden called on other nations to produce tougher plans to cut carbon emissions at the COP27 climate summit in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt

By Madeleine Cuff

11 November 2022

US president Joe Biden closed the first week of the COP27 climate talks in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, with a call for countries to fight for 鈥渁 more equitable, prosperous world鈥 at the summit.

鈥淭he climate crisis is about human security, economic security, environmental security, national security and the very life of the planet,鈥 he told delegates.

In a 3-hour stopover on his way to a G20 meeting in Indonesia, Biden said the US is on track to meet its 2030 climate targets and called on other nations to come forward with tougher plans to cut emissions.

鈥淚f we are going to win this fight, every major emitting nation needs to align to [the] 1.5掳C [target]. We can no longer plead ignorance about the consequences of our actions,鈥 he said.

However, although Biden was confident the US would meet its domestic commitments, he acknowledged that it may struggle to fulfil international promises after the midterm elections held this week, with control of Congress still in the balance.

Key among those promises is a pledge made last year to quadruple climate finance by 2024, which was seen as important for unlocking progress at COP26 in Glasgow, UK. A Republican-controlled House of Representatives would make that commitment next to impossible to deliver, although Biden promised to 鈥渇ight鈥 for it.

Biden鈥檚 appearance ends a week that has seen little in the way of new financial commitments from world leaders, which observers warn threatens to stall progress at the talks.

Joe Biden speaking at COP27

Joe Biden speaks at the COP27 climate summit

Alex Brandon/AP/Shutterstock

The issue of finance has dogged the summit from the start, says Tom Evans at climate think tank E3G. 鈥淭his question of finance has led to quite a lacklustre leaders鈥 summit and a real absence of the sense of how countries are delivering on their commitments or coming up with new commitments,鈥 he says.

Meanwhile, negotiations have reached a deadlock as delegations await the arrival of ministers next week. Talks on doubling adaptation funding and a 鈥渨ork programme鈥 to accelerate emissions cuts this decade are causing particular concern, New 女生小视频 understands.

There is an air of 鈥渦nease鈥 and 鈥渦ncertainty鈥 as talks head into their second week, says Evans.

Logistical issues haven’t helped the mood. Food and drink were scarce and expensive for the first few days of the summit, while the sprawling venue, baking sunshine and poor signage have left delegates tired and disorientated.

After a number of official complaints by national delegations, the summit鈥檚 Egyptian hosts slashed food prices and started handing out free soft drinks on 10 November in an effort to quell the rising discontent.

The week ahead

Over the weekend, attention will shift to the 鈥渃over text鈥, the final political agreement to mark the end of the summit. Discussions on what this year鈥檚 document should include will begin on 12 September.

At COP26 last year, the final text 鈥 known as the Glasgow Climate Pact 鈥 broke new ground, calling for a 鈥減hase-down鈥 of global coal use, a doubling of adaptation financing and for countries to return with updated climate plans at COP27.

The challenge in Sharm El Sheikh will be to deliver something at least as ambitious. For a summit like COP27, where key decisions on issues such as “loss and damage” won鈥檛 come until next year, the cover text is a vital tool for communicating progress at the summit to the wider world.

Already lobbying is under way for the text to include stronger language on fossil fuels, perhaps upgrading the 鈥減hase-down鈥 of coal use to a 鈥減hase-out鈥 or expanding the commitment to include all fossil fuels 鈥 but India and China, which successfully torpedoed the 鈥減hase-down鈥 language at COP26, are expected to push back.

Also seen as key is a fresh commitment to cutting emissions and holding global warming to 1.5掳C. 鈥淲e would certainly expect to see a section on mitigation that builds on the signals in the Glasgow Climate Pact,鈥 the European Union鈥檚 head of delegation, Jacob Werksman, told a press briefing.

Alongside wrangling over the final cover text, next week will see ministerial delegations descend on the conference to thrash out details on the technical negotiations.

Meanwhile, Luiz In谩cio Lula da Silva, the newly elected president of Brazil, is expected to arrive at the summit on 15 November, raising hopes he could make fresh commitments on Amazon deforestation.

A 鈥淛ust Energy Transition Partnership鈥 could also be revealed next week that would see higher-income countries, including the US, Japan and the UK, provide funding to help Indonesia retire coal power plants early, echoing a deal agreed with South Africa last year.

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