The issue for the Cop26 Global Leaders Summit on climate change is “matching the rhetoric with action”, Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said.
Mr Martin is joining world leaders in the Scottish city of Glasgow for the two-week summit, which has been billed as a make-or-break chance to save the planet from the most calamitous effects of climate change.
Delayed by a year because of the Covid-19 pandemic, Cop26 aims to keep alive a target of capping global warming at 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels – the limit scientists say would avoid its most destructive consequences.
Meeting that goal, agreed in Paris to much fanfare in 2015, will require a surge in political momentum and diplomatic heavy-lifting to make up for the insufficient action and empty pledges that have characterised much of global climate politics.
Speaking after his address at Fianna Fáil's annual Wolfe Tone commemoration about Bodenstown in Co Kildare, Mr Martin said Ireland had a "strong position" and there had to be action over the next number of years.
“There’s no alternative facing the world but to deal very quickly and urgently with the climate change challenge,” he said.
He said the climate crisis is an “existential threat” for young people and the next generation, and said: “It’s absolutely essential that every country plays its part. And that means Ireland as well.”
Mr Martin said he was “hopeful that we can achieve a positive outcome out of Cop26”, when asked his view on the expectation that the agreement reached by leaders at the conference will be weak.
He said the fact that the United States, under president Joe Biden, had signed up to the Paris agreement "gives a very good platform and safety net to the carbon Cop26", and the US is "creating a new momentum with the European Union to become even more ambitious".
“We actually have made progress globally, given where we are, for example, back a decade ago in 2009,” Mr Martin said.
He said the outcome of the summit will depend on contributions from China and Russia, but added: "I actually think we're now in a better position at Cop26 than we would have been over a year ago.
Mr Martin will attend the World Leaders Summit on Monday and Tuesday, which will kick off two weeks of discussions between 196 countries, and the European Union, to “secure renewed commitment to global action on climate change”.
A roundtable event for world leaders on Monday afternoon, hosted by British prime minister Boris Johnson, is at the top of the Taoiseach's schedule – before he delivers Ireland's national statement to the summit on Tuesday.
The statement is expected to set out “how Ireland is contributing to [the] achievement of the Paris Goals, including limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees, and to helping developing and vulnerable countries mitigate the impacts of climate change”.
Mr Martin will also attend several bilateral meetings and receptions during the two-day summit.
Earlier on Sunday, the Taoiseach warned that world leaders must act now “if we are to leave a habitable planet to future generations”.
He said that although the challenge is big, he has “faith in the capacity of humans to work together to overcome it”.
“Science is leading the way,” Mr Martin said. “Leaders must put the right policies in place, as we are doing in Ireland.
“I also hope that Cop26 will see a real step forward in climate finance, supporting the most vulnerable countries. The transition must deliver climate justice – nobody should be left behind.”
Ambitious pledges
The UN conference needs to secure more ambitious pledges to further cut emissions, lock in billions in climate finance, and finish the rules to implement the Paris Agreement with the unanimous consent of the nearly 200 countries that signed it.
"Let's be clear – there is a serious risk that Glasgow will not deliver," United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres told leaders of the Group of 20 (G20) rich nations last week.
“Even if recent pledges were clear and credible – and there are serious questions about some of them – we are still careening towards climate catastrophe.”
Countries’ existing pledges to cut emissions would see the planet’s average temperature rise 2.7 degrees this century, which the UN says would supercharge the destruction that climate change is already causing by intensifying storms, exposing more people to deadly heat and floods, killing coral reefs and destroying natural habitats.
The signals ahead of Cop26 have been mixed. A new pledge last week from China, the world's biggest polluter, was labelled a missed opportunity that will cast a shadow over the two-week summit. Announcements from Russia and Saudi Arabia were also lacklustre.
The return of the United States, the world's biggest economy, to UN climate talks will be a boon to the conference, after a four-year absence under former president Donald Trump.
But like many world leaders, US president Joe Biden will arrive at Cop26 without firm legislation in place to deliver his own climate pledge as Congress wrangles over how to finance it and new uncertainty about whether US agencies can even regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
Leaders of the G20 meeting in Rome this weekend will say they aim to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees, but will largely avoid firm commitments, according to a draft statement seen by Reuters.
The joint statement reflects tough negotiations, but details few concrete actions to limit carbon emissions.
The G20, which includes Brazil, China, India, Germany and the US, accounts for about 80 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, but hopes the Rome meeting might pave the way to success in Scotland have dimmed considerably.
Covid-19
Adding to the challenging geopolitical backdrop, a global energy crunch has prompted China to turn to highly polluting coal to avert power shortages, and left Europe seeking more gas, another fossil fuel.
Ultimately, negotiations will boil down to questions of fairness and trust between rich countries whose greenhouse gas emissions caused climate change, and poor countries being asked to decarbonise their economies with insufficient financial support.
Covid-19 has exacerbated the divide between rich and poor. A lack of vaccines and travel curbs mean some representatives from the poorest countries cannot attend the meeting.
Other obstacles – not least, sky-high hotel rates in Glasgow – have stoked concerns that civil society groups from the poorest nations which are also most at risk from global warming will be under-represented.
Covid-19 will make this UN climate conference different from any other, as 25,000 delegates from governments, companies, civil society, indigenous peoples and the media will fill Glasgow’s cavernous Scottish Event Campus.
All must wear masks, socially distance and produce a negative Covid-19 test to enter each day – meaning the final-hour “huddles” of negotiators that clinched deals at past climate talks are off the table.
World leaders will kick start Cop26 on Monday with two days of speeches that could include some new emissions-cutting pledges, before technical negotiators lock horns over the Paris accord rules. Any deal is likely to be struck hours or even days after the event’s November 12th finish date.
Protests
Outside, tens of thousands of protesters are expected to take to the streets to demand urgent climate action.
Assessing progress will be complex. Unlike past climate summits, the event won’t deliver a new treaty or a big “win” but seeks to secure smaller but vital victories on emission-cutting pledges, climate finance and investment.
Ultimately success will be judged on whether those deals add up to enough progress to keep the 1.5C goal alive – still a long way off.
Since the Paris accord in 2015, scientists have issued increasingly urgent warnings that the 1.5C goal is slipping out of reach. To meet it, global emissions must plummet 45 per cent by 2030 from 2010 levels, and reach net zero by 2050 – requiring huge changes to countries’ systems of transport, energy production, manufacturing and farming. Countries’ current pledges would see global emissions soar by 16 per cent by 2030.
"The way I think about this is, there is a meteor coming at our planet and it has the very real potential of wiping out humanity," said Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate diplomat who led the talks that yielded the Paris Agreement. – Additional reporting Reuters