A “clear” fall in global greenhouse gas emissions is on the near horizon for the first time, the United Nations (UN) has said, after governments including Britain published new plans on how to cut their climate impact.
Despite years of UN negotiations, emissions soared to record highs last year – driving the hottest global temperatures on record, extreme wildfires in Brazil, and flooding in Valencia.
But new pledges from the likes of China, India and the EU are due to cut emissions by 10% by 2035, compared with 2019 levels, according to the UN’s climate chief.
“Humanity is now clearly bringing emissions down for the first time, although still not nearly fast enough,” UN climate change chief Simon Stiell wrote on social media on Tuesday.
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Renewables overtake coal for the first time
‘Need for speed’
The plans are the homework countries are required to produce to show how they will fulfil their part of the bargain under the Paris Agreement struck in 2015.
The landmark accord aims to limit global warming to ideally 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
This would require emissions to fall by 60% by 2035, far greater than the approximately 10% the UN forecast today.
“While the direction of travel is improving every year, we have a serious need for more speed,” added Mr Stiell in a separate statement.
“The science is equally clear that temperatures absolutely can and must be brought back down to 1.5C as quickly as possible after any temporary overshoot.”
COP must ‘send clear signal’
Warnings that the world has blown its chances of limiting warming to 1.5C have been growing louder.
The so-called “nationally determined contributions” (NDCs) show wildly different levels of commitment between those greasing the wheels of global climate efforts and those throwing sand in the gears.
Many countries missed the deadline or produced half-baked versions.
Mr Stiell said COP30 must “send a clear signal” that countries are “still fully on board for climate cooperation, because it works, but must work faster, and that means achieving concrete and strong outcomes on all key issues”.