As world leaders prepare to gather for COP26 next month, expectations for progress are low, even as the need to address climate change becomes more urgent. The European Union was critical in building the coalition needed to conclude the Paris climate agreement in 2015, and success in Glasgow may again depend on EU leadership
The United Kingdom’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, may
not appeal to everyone – especially European Union leaders put off by
Brexit. But the UK is hosting the latest round of global climate
negotiations, COP26, in Glasgow next month, so the EU must put aside its
issues with Johnson and come ready to work.
Up to this point, the history of the global
climate talks held under the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change is a tale of two European cities: Copenhagen and Paris.
In 2009, world leaders and their national negotiators came together in
Copenhagen to conclude a comprehensive treaty that would commit the
entire world to far-reaching action to prevent the worst ravages of
global warming.
It didn’t happen.
Too many of the big players (and emitters) arrived without any viable
proposals for reducing greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions, and EU leaders
found themselves hanging around in the corridors while the United
States, China, and India crafted a nonbinding agreement that left many
issues unresolved. Representatives from the most vulnerable countries
looked on in despair as their interests once again were sidelined.
A
key political miscalculation doomed the Copenhagen meeting to fail:
While the EU is the champion of its own people, it is also a vital
partner to those countries most affected by the terrifying consequences
of climate change. Without European partnership – and by that I mean
real political, practical, and financial aid – the most vulnerable are
left with no role in negotiations and no choice in terms of the sources
and conditions of the support available to them. But the EU learned from this experience.
In 2011, at COP17 in Durban, South Africa, the EU led the way with a roadmap
to ensure a voice for those most at risk. That initiative delivered an
outcome that paved the way for the Paris climate agreement at COP21 four
years later. In 2015, when world leaders came to Paris, the Europeans again played a leading role. The EU helped form the High Ambition Coalition,
an informal group of developed and developing countries committed to
supporting the common goal of a genuine transition to a green economy.
This time, the US and China signaled that they understood the shared
interest in climate action. The target of limiting global warming to
1.5º Celsius relative to pre-industrial levels was established, and
developed countries pledged to fund the poorest countries’ efforts to
mitigate the impact of climate change and achieve sustainable economic
growth. The onus was on the major economies to act fast and share the
benefits of their wealth and knowledge.
The Paris agreement
was signed, and suddenly the future looked a little brighter. But in the
six years since, annual global GHG emissions have continued to climb,
even in the pandemic-stricken year of 2020. Climate models
have proven devastatingly accurate, as floods, hurricanes, wildfires,
and killer heat waves grow in frequency and intensity. And this, as we
know, is only the beginning.
While discussions of the climate
crisis once were considered a problem for future generations or those
already living in extreme conditions, now Europe is suffering, too.
Germans and Belgians are being killed by
floods, and
extreme temperatures are upending entire communities across the Mediterranean.
And so, we arrive at Glasgow. This is the year all Paris agreement
signatories, having assessed their progress, were meant to return to the
table prepared to increase their ambition for action at home and, in
the case of richer countries, deliver support to poorer ones. But there
is not enough new money being offered. And the UK’s decision to
reduce its historic 0.7%-of-GDP overseas aid commitment just months before taking over the COP presidency sent the wrong message.
Meanwhile, parts of the British government seem to be more focused on
spectacle than substance, and the US and China seem more interested in
goading each other than in focusing on their respective contributions to
the fight against global warming. The tasks for the world’s
two largest emitters, jointly responsible for almost half of global emissions, are clear: The US must follow through on its
pledge to provide climate finance, and China must
phase out its use of coal. Each is as important as the other.
But where are the Europeans? Few, if any, EU governments are engaged in
serious diplomacy to reconstitute the High Ambition Coalition that was
critical to success in Paris, and the EU is not exerting any real
pressure on the US to deliver its share of the annual $100 billion
promised to poor countries to help them adapt and thrive.
If COP26 is to take
its rightful place in history as the moment the world truly decided to
work together to address our greatest-ever threat, the EU must stand up.
The EU is the world’s richest trading bloc, most established diplomatic
force, and leading example of the power of tolerance and fairness.
Unless it plays a key role, COP26 will fail.
Everyone, everywhere
will benefit if the EU, its leaders, and its diplomatic machinery move
now to avert disaster and secure victory for global, inclusive, and
ambitious climate action. Real money and real emissions reductions need
to emerge from Glasgow. The world cannot afford another Copenhagen.
Connie Hedegaard served as European Commissioner for Climate Action
(2010-14), and as Denmark’s Minister for the Environment (2004-07) and
Minister for Climate and Energy (2007-09).
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
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