The fact that several world leaders will not be present at the UNSG’s Climate Summit next week in New York is a telling sign of political disconnect from the everyday lives of millions of people impacted by the climate crisis, said civil society representatives at a press briefing.
The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has set a high bar for entry – inviting
leaders to speak only if they have ambitious new commitments on climate
action.
Lauren MacDonald, Campaigner with the group #StopRosebank said: “We
know – and the UK government knows – there can be no new drilling if we
want a habitable world and yet they are issuing new licenses and considering
approving the massive Rosebank oil field, which would create more CO2 emissions
than 28 of the poorest countries produce in a year combined.”
That
the UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is not going to the UN summit was
frankly embarrassing, she said and highlights the hypocrisy of
his government.
The press briefing organised by Climate Action Network comes ahead of
weekend-long global mobilisations planned from tomorrow under the Global Fight to End Fossil Fuels,
and to set expectations for the UNSG Climate Ambition Summit, in New York, on
20 September and towards COP28 in Dubai.
Mohamed
Adow, Director, Power Shift Africa said while the Africa Climate Summit
which was held in early September was historic in being the first climate
summit focused on Africa it failed to deliver anything transformational and
instead pushed for carbon markets which are nothing but ‘polluter permits’
advocated by rich companies and governments to perpetuate their own ongoing
carbon pollution.
Outcomes
from recent high-level events have shown a serious political misalignment which
does not bode well for an ambitious outcome at COP28. The UNSG’s Summit must be
a moment to expose the laggards and the UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres
has shown he has no qualms in doing this.
Brandon Wu, Director of Policy and Campaigns, ActionAid USA said in the
context of the unrelenting climate disasters hitting every part of the world, “the
next few months will be crucial for communities in developing countries: a
pledging conference for the Green Climate Fund and the conclusion of crucial
negotiations on the new Loss & Damage Fund, both in October, will help
determine how much money is available for developing countries in the coming
years for the kind of climate action on which literally millions of lives will
depend.
“Unfortunately,
rich countries have consistently failed to meet the moment. The scale of
finance to support climate action in developing countries is dwarfed by the
scale of the disasters they are facing every day. This is not just an
abdication of responsibility, it is a literal death sentence for many, and it
has to change immediately.”
Avantika
Goswami, Programme Manager, Climate Change at the Centre for Science and
Environment, said the recent Global Stocktake Report,
an assessment of overall climate action by the UN which will serve as an input
at the UNFCCC COP28 summit, shows how wildly off track the world is in meeting
the challenge to tackle the climate crisis.
The
G20 Summit held just after this sobering report showed a tepid
political reaction to the everyday reality of climate devastation. While having
consensus on a statement was welcome, she said, consensus on a low-ambition
declaration that did not balance a renewable energy mention with a matching
intent to phase out fossil fuels in an equitable manner was hardly a win.
“The signals from the G20 declaration show positive momentum on building up
renewable energy and recognition of the need for low cost financing for the energy
transition in developing countries. But the lack of a fossil fuel phase out
commitment dampens the effect of this progress, and shows that fossil-producing
countries still exert undue influence. Oil and gas account for 54% of global
GHG emissions, and their producers must be held accountable.”
Citing the findings of the recent Oil Change International report,
tilted Planet Wreckers which shows than just 20 countries are responsible
for nearly 90% of CO2 pollution threatened by new oil & gas extraction
projects between 2023 and 2050. MacDonald called out the leaders of the five
major polluters the USA, the UK, Australia, Canada and Norway and said their
decision to continue fossil fuel expansion was to willfully put lives in
danger.
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