
Is the 1.5掳C goal still alive? The answer is a good way to boil down the mind-boggling complexity of whether the COP26 summit, which finished in dramatic fashion last Saturday, puts humanity on the path that climate science calls for.
Six years ago in Paris, 195 countries committed to this temperature goal as their line in the sand for limiting future global warming, in addition to holding it 鈥渨ell below鈥 2掳C. Yet the emissions-cutting plans put forward in 2015 left the world facing a cataclysmic 3.5掳C of warming by 2100.
That is why nations in Paris also agreed a 鈥渞atchet mechanism鈥 to upgrade the plans by the end of 2020. Many missed the deadline, so COP26 in Glasgow, UK, became the de facto cut-off point.
Advertisement
This first crank of the ratchet yielded a mixed bag of plans. Some big emitters, including the European Union, Japan, the UK and the US, significantly deepened how much they say they will cut emissions by the end of the decade. China and India upped their ambition, but their emissions will still rise this decade. Many other sizeable polluters, including Australia, Brazil and Indonesia, didn鈥檛 issue improved plans.
The net result leaves us in a better position, but one that is still nowhere near good enough: an Earth about 2.4掳C hotter than pre鈥慽ndustrial times, according to an authoritative analysis by , a non-profit scientific body in Germany, that assumes countries deliver on their 2030 emissions targets.
That is why the inconspicuous paragraph 29 of the newly forged Glasgow Climate Pact, gavelled in late on Saturday, is so crucial. It requests countries submit stronger plans next year for how much they plan to curb emissions by 2030. And those plans must also be aligned with the 1.5掳C goal, a more precise and tougher requirement than the pre-COP26 commitment for a 鈥減rogression鈥 in successive plans.
The question now is: will countries cough up new plans? The UK, which is already committed to a steep 68 per cent emissions cut by 2030, is unlikely to do more. Australia, Brazil and the Philippines have national elections next year, so citizens could elect leaders with a mandate to go further.
at the University of East Anglia, UK, says the package of pledges in Glasgow keeps the 1.5掳C goal alive, but only just. 鈥淭he language is really important. Every word has been ramped up to a level above what it was before,鈥 she says. The target is alive but 鈥渉anging by a thread鈥, says Chris Stark at the Climate Change Committee, an independent body that advises the UK government. COP26 president Alok Sharma has said 1.5掳C remains alive, but even he concedes its 鈥減ulse is weak鈥.
Negotiators in Glasgow also set a precedent by referring directly to coal and to fossil fuel subsidies in the final agreement. This is the first time this has happened in 26 years of UN climate summits. India鈥檚 last-minute weakening of the language used, from a 鈥減hase-out鈥 of coal to a 鈥減hase-down鈥, doesn鈥檛 really matter, says at trade group Energy UK. It still sends a 鈥渞eally, really powerful market signal鈥, especially to investors, she says. 鈥淭his is the first time the F-word [fossil fuels] is in a COP decision. It鈥檚 progress,鈥 says Mohamed Adow at think tank .
There were many other successes. A pledge to double the money given to help lower-income countries adapt to climate change, such as by building flood defences or planting new crops, to $40 billion by 2025. A decision to work out a global adaptation goal and finance for poorer countries post-2025. Agreement on the 鈥淧aris rulebook鈥, a group of rules on everything from transparency to carbon markets that have remained unresolved for six years.
But new rules, a promise to come back next year (to COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt) and woolly language on coal won鈥檛 satisfy many people rightly anxious about the urgency of climate action. Still, the outcome exceeded the expectations of many veteran observers who spoke to New 杏吧原创, including Le Qu茅r茅. 鈥淭here is a mismatch between what perhaps the broader public and the young people think you can achieve in a COP,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 achieve everything in a COP.鈥
Critically, COP26 has maintained momentum on climate action and even explicitly spelled out the challenge: 鈥渞ecognizing鈥 that restricting warming to 1.5掳C means a global 45 per cent emissions cut by 2030, on 2010 levels. Governments must now translate their pledges into policies and action, an area where even climate leaders like the UK have been found wanting.
Ultimately, UN climate summits alone can only do so much. The battle to keep 1.5掳C alive will be won at ballot boxes, on the streets, in courts and in boardrooms. Campaigner Greta Thunberg, who was disappointed by COP26鈥檚 outcome, tweeted: 鈥溾
Sign up to our free Fix the Planet newsletter to get a dose of climate optimism delivered straight to your inbox, every Thursday