By Patrick GALEY
PARIS (AFP) — The world’s nations are currently planning to produce more than double the amount of coal, oil and gas consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the United Nations said.
Ten days before a climate summit that is being billed as key to the viability of the Paris Agreement temperature goals, the UN’s Environment Program said that government fossil fuel production plans this decade were “dangerously out of sync” with the emissions cuts needed.
The UN says emissions must go down nearly 50 percent by 2030 and to net-zero by mid century to limit warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.
But its Production Gap report found that total fossil fuel production would likely increase until at least 2040.
Development plans would produce 110 percent more fossil fuels this decade than consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C, and 45 percent more than for a world where temperatures increase 2°C.
“The research is clear: global coal, oil and gas production must start declining immediately and steeply to be consistent with limiting long-term warming to 1.5°C,” said Ploy Achakulwisut, a lead report author from the Stockholm Environment Institute.
“However, governments continue to plan for and support levels of fossil fuel production that are vastly in excess of what we can safely burn.”
With 1.1°C of warming so far, Earth is being pummeled by ever-more-frequent drought, floods and storms supercharged by rising sea levels.
‘Major mismatch’
The 2015 Paris deal saw countries commit to limiting warming to between 1.5°C and 2°C through sweeping emissions cuts.
Under the deal, every signatory must submit renewed emissions cutting plans — known as National Determined Contributions, or NDCs — every five years.
In an assessment last month the UN said that, taken together, countries’ latest NDCs — assuming they are fulfilled — put Earth on course to reach a “catastrophic” 2.7°C of warming by 2100.
The organisers of COP26, which starts in Glasgow on October 31, say they want the summit to keep the 1.5°C temperature goal within reach.
Michael Lazarus, a co-author of Wednesday’s report, said the difference between countries’ NDCs and production plans was “the major mismatch” in climate diplomacy right now.
“Even in the face of inevitable decarbonization away from fossil fuels, some countries are speeding up their investments in activities to promote fossil fuel production, vowing to remain the last ones standing,” he said.
Last week the International Energy Agency (IEA) said that the use of coal — the most polluting fossil fuel — had in fact increased since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. In May it said that no new oil and gas production was compatible with 1.5°C.
The report showed that governments planned to produce around 240 percent more coal by 2030 than the 1.5°C goal allows.
They also plan for 57 percent more oil and 71 percent more natural gas, the report said.
In order to achieve carbon neutrality and avoid blowing past the 1.5°C goal, Lazarus said that “we don’t need production in new fields at this point”.
“Countries need to acknowledge the need for a just and equitable transition and report on how their production plans align with their climate plans,” he said.
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