'Alarm bell': U.N. chief, UK PM convene leaders on climate change
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[September 20, 2021]
By Michelle Nichols and Valerie Volcovici
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - With less than
six weeks to go before world leaders convene for a major climate summit
in Glasgow, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres and UK Prime
Minister Boris Johnson will hold a roundtable of world leaders on Monday
to address major gaps on emissions targets and climate finance.
The closed-door meeting on the sidelines of the annual high-level week
of the U.N. General Assembly will include leaders from a few dozen
countries representing industrialized nations, emerging economies and
vulnerable developing countries, said Selwin Hart, assistant
secretary-general and special adviser to Guterres on climate action.
"The alarm bell needs to be rung," he told reporters last week.
"Countries are not on target, really, to bridge these gaps in
mitigation, finance and adaptation."
The roundtable discussion aims to ensure a successful outcome at the
U.N. climate conference being held from Oct. 31 to Nov. 12 in Glasgow,
even as recent reports show major economies being far off track on their
emission reduction goals and climate finance commitments.
As of Friday, between 35 and 40 countries have said they would
participate but Hart declined to name them.
A U.N. analysis of country pledges under the Paris climate
agreement released on Friday said that under current national pledges,
global emissions would be 16% higher in 2030 than they were in 2010 -
far off the 45% reduction by 2030 that scientists say is needed to stave
off disastrous climate change.
Another report released on Friday by the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development said that rich countries likely missed a
goal to contribute $100 billion last year to helping developing nations
deal with climate change after increasing funding by less than 2% in
2019.
The U.N. expects to hear updates from some of the major economies on how
they will strengthen their emission reduction targets and clarity around
how to hit the $100 billion goal.
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Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson greets U.N. Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres before a bilateral meeting, during G7 summit in
Carbis Bay, Cornwall, Britain, June 12, 2021. Adrian Dennis/Pool via
REUTERS
Guterres will also press donor countries and
multilateral development banks to show progress toward meeting his
goal to increase the share of finance dedicated to helping countries
adapt to climate change to 50% from the current level of 21%, said
Hart.
Hart said that current finance dedicated to adaptation is around
$16.7 billion a year, a fraction of the current estimated adaptation
costs of around $70 billion a year.
Johnson, host of the COP26, said at a meeting of the major economies
on Friday that the world's richest countries "must get serious about
filling the $100 billion pot that the developing world needs in
order to do its bit."
Guterres told Reuters last week that the upcoming climate summit is
at risk of failure.
"I believe that we are at risk of not having a success in COP26,"
Guterres told Reuters in an interview at U.N. headquarters in New
York on Wednesday. "There is still a level of mistrust, between
north and south, developed and developing countries, that needs to
be overcome."
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols at the United Nations and Valerie
Volcovici in Washington; Editing by Mary Milliken and Daniel Wallis)
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