UN (AP) – As China leads its way by announcing its first emission reductions, world leaders said Wednesday that it is getting more serious about combating climate change and the fatal extreme weather that comes with it.
At the United Nations’ high-level climate summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced that the world’s largest carbon-polluting nation aims to reduce emissions by 7% to 10% by 2035. Spitting out more than 31% of the world’s carbon footprintand they have been surged for a long time.
The announcement came together over 100 world leaders to talk about the growing urgency and the need for stronger efforts to curb the exhalation of heat-confined gas.
With massive international climate negotiations in Brazil, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres convened a special leadership summit on Wednesday at the general assembly, focusing on specific plans to curb emissions from coal, oil and natural gas.
At the video address, XI pledged that China will increase wind and solar power six times from 2020 levels, make pollution-free vehicles mainstream and “estimate a climate-adaptive society.”
Europe then followed a new, less detailed, less formal climate change combat program. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that the prices of renewable energy infrastructure, investment and carbon have all risen, with emissions falling by almost 40% since 1940.
Trump’s climate comment was challenged
Last week, member states agreed that nationally determined contributions range from 66% to 72%, and that they formally filed the plan prior to negotiations in November, she said.
XI and Brazilian leaders took a thinly veiled swipe with President Donald Trump on Wednesday afternoon Attacks with renewable energy and climate change concepts one day ago. “Some countries are acting on that, but the international community needs to focus in the right direction,” Xi said.
“No one is safe from the effects of climate change. The border walls will not stop droughts and storms,” Lula said, according to Brazil’s Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, who is holding up an upcoming climate conference. “Nature will not succumb to bombs or warships. No country stands above another country.”
“We could all lose because negativism actually could win,” he concluded.
Guterres said, “Science calls for action. The law commands it. Economics forces it. And people want it.”
“Wake up” time during a catastrophe
“We’re all there to issue requests that we all wake up from communities where hospitals and schools are being destroyed,” said Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine.
“If we don’t wake up now and end our dependence on fossil fuels, the leaders of all the countries in this room will be awakened by calls about wildfires, storms, heat waves, hunger and drought catastrophes,” she said.
Pakistan Prime Minister Muhammad Shebaz Sharif said his country is well aware of this. Recent floods have affected 5 million people in over 4,000 villages and killed over 1,000 people.
“When I tell you, my country is upset by the heavy monsoon rains, flash floods, landslides and catastrophic city floods,” he said. “We are facing this disaster when the scars of the 2022 floods exceed $30 billion and millions are evacuated, when millions are still visible across our land.”
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called it the decisive decade of climate action, saying Australians know the sacrifices of more frequent and extreme weather events, such as cyclones, floods, bushes and droughts. “Australia knows we’re not alone,” he said.
“We have to admit our failure here.”
“We look to be accelerating global warming,” climate scientist Johan Lockstrom said at a science briefing that launched the summit. “We must admit our failure here. We must admit that we have not protected people and countries from the unmanageable effects of climate change that induced humans and nations.”
“We are dangerously close to causing radical, irreversible changes,” Lockstrom said.
Texas Technology climate scientist Katherine Haiho told leaders it has something to do with worsening floods, wildfires, heatwaves, storms and many other deaths.
Under 2015 Paris Climate Accort195 countries are set to submit a more stringent five-year new plan on how to curb carbon emissions from coal, oil and natural gas combustion. Technically, the deadline was February. And about 50 countries – responsible for a quarter of the world’s carbon emissions – submitted theirs, including Pakistan, Micronesia, Mongolia, Liberia and Vanuatu.
All of these countries were submitted on Wednesday. UN authorities said the country needs to plan by the end of the month, so the UN can calculate how well the more warming planet is going. Former President Joe Biden submitted the US plan before taking office late last year, and the Trump administration distanced himself from the plan.
Before 2015, the world had been on a 4°C (7.2°F) path since its pre-industrial era, but now it has trimmed to 2.6°C (4.7°F).
However, the Paris Agreement set the goal of limiting global warming 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) From the world since the mid-19th century Already warmed to about 1.3 degrees Celsius Since (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit).
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