Experts say COP28 nations’ agreement to transition from fossil fuels is deemed too slow

Experts say COP28 nations’ agreement to transition from fossil fuels is deemed too slow



Days⁤ of contentious wrangling in Dubai at the United Nations’ 28th annual climate summit ended December 13 with a historic agreement to “transition away” ⁢from fossil ‌fuels and accelerate climate action over the‍ next decade. The organization touted the‍ agreement as a moment of global solidarity, marking “the beginning of the ‍end” of the fossil fuel era.
The agreement is considered the world’s first “global stocktake,” an inventory⁢ of climate actions and progress made since the 2015 Paris Agreement to limit global warming to “well below” ⁣2 degrees Celsius above the preindustrial average⁢ (SN: 12/12/15).
It acknowledges ‌the conclusions of scientific research that greenhouse gas emissions will need to be cut by 43 percent by 2030 compared ‍with 2019⁣ levels, in order to limit global⁢ warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius⁢ by the end of the century. It then calls ⁣on nations to speed up climate actions before 2030 so as to reach global net zero by 2050 — in which greenhouse​ gases entering ​the atmosphere are​ balanced by their removal from the atmosphere. Among the actions called for are increasing global renewable⁢ energy generation, phasing down coal power‌ and phasing⁣ out fossil fuel subsidies.
But among many scientists gathered in San⁣ Francisco at the American Geophysical Union’s annual meeting to discuss climate change’s impacts to Earth’s atmosphere, polar regions, ‌oceans and biosphere, the reaction ⁣to the language in the agreement was more frustrated than celebratory.

2023-12-15 10:30:00
Link from www.sciencenews.org

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