COP28: Three Key Climate Battles to Take Center Stage

COP28: Three Key Climate Battles to Take Center Stage



Three ​climate fights will dominate COP28

The‌ United Arab Emirates, venue for cop28, the⁢ latest climate summit convened by the United Nations, is⁣ a controversial choice. Some 70,000 climate advocates, diplomats and other hangers-on will attend an event that begins on ⁢November 30th in Dubai,​ one ⁣of the gleaming​ cities built on wealth that fossil fuels have brought to the region.​ The fact ​that the world’s most important climate gathering will be hosted ⁣by a leading oil producer has sparked⁢ outrage among environmentalists.‍ That the ‍summit’s president, Sultan Al Jaber, runs adnoc, the uae’s national ⁣oil​ company (noc), is proof, whisper conspiracists, that the⁤ fix is in on behalf of ⁤Big Oil.

Yet from Abu Dhabi on the Persian Gulf, the shipping route to global markets‌ for​ the world’s greatest concentration of oil reserves, to Fujairah on the Gulf of Oman, ​an entrepot ⁣abuzz with​ tankers carrying ‌Russian oil evading Western sanctions, comes a sense of vulnerability to climate change. The region is short on water and home-grown food.⁢ The rising heat ‌of summer is becoming inhumane. The cities built⁤ on​ these desert sands‌ are⁢ at risk from a rising sea level. That the uae shares the threat from increasing global temperatures makes the gathering no less fraught.

So low is trust among many delegates that the ⁢talks may break down. That ‌would be alarming.​ A un report analysing the national climate-action plans of the 198 parties to the cop found them woefully inadequate for tackling emissions (see chart 1) and hence achieving the goal ⁢of limiting the global temperature rise called for in‌ the Paris agreement of cop21 in‌ 2015. In short, the stakes are high. Amid the summit’s myriad technical and⁢ procedural goals, three big topics cry out for action.

2023-11-16 09:48:08
Article from www.economist.com
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