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Not good enough: National climate pledges
By Am�lie BOTTOLLIER-DEPOIS
Paris (AFP) Oct 28, 2021

Dutch not yet reaching greenhouse gas targets: report
The Hague (AFP) Oct 28, 2021 - A Dutch target to cut greenhouse gas emissions by almost half by 2030 will not yet be reached, although efforts towards a 49-percent reduction were improving, a government agency said on Thursday.

Based on current policies, emissions of harmful gasses were expected to fall by between 38-48 percent from 1990 figures, the Dutch Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL) said in a new report.

The latest assessment comes days ahead of the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow -- also to be attended by the Netherlands, one of the continent's largest per capita polluters.

"The government's objective of emitting 49 percent less by 2030 than in 1990 is not yet in sight," the report said.

"There is improvement compared to 2020, but this is not enough to achieve climate objectives and even less the more ambitious European climate objectives for 2030 and 2050," added the Council of State, the body that advises the Dutch government.

EU member states agreed in April to adopt a target of a net reduction of "at least 55 percent" in EU greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, compared to 1990 levels.

The low-lying Netherlands is particularly vulnerable to global warming and rising ocean levels, with around a third of the country lying below sea level.

Environmental group Urgenda won a landmark case in 2019 in Dutch courts, ordering the government to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 25 percent by the end of 2020.

That target was largely met, the PBL said, due to many factors including a sharp drop in road traffic emissions because of the coronavirus pandemic and unforeseen developments in the energy sector.

The PBL however predicted a rise in 2021 in emissions in the Netherlands, exceeding the Urgenda target -- mainly because of rising industrial production and greater electricity demands.

Six years ago, nearly every country in the world set targets for reducing their carbon emissions -- but the sum total of their pledges fell far short of what was needed to keep the planet from dangerously overheating.

That first raft of "nationally determined contributions" (NDCs) -- many conditioned on financing and technical support -- under the 2015 Paris Agreement would have seen Earth heat up three to four degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

The treaty called for a cap of "well below" 2C.

And following a landmark 2018 UN climate science report that warned of dire impacts even at 2C, Paris' aspirational 1.5C limit has become the de facto target.

Under the deal's "ratchet" mechanism, signatories review and renew their emission-cutting plans every five years.

Most countries have done so since late 2020, but a new tally still puts the world on course toward "catastrophic" warming of 2.7C by 2100, according to the UN.

Ahead of the COP26 summit kicking off in Glasgow Sunday, AFP rounds up national pledges:

- China -

In 2016, China -- responsible for more than a quarter of all carbon pollution and by far the largest emitter -- promised to reduce the intensity of its emissions 65 percent by 2030.

In September last year, President Xi Jinping made a surprise announcement at the UN General Assembly: China plans to achieve carbon neutrality by around 2060.

On Thursday, Beijing released its much anticipated NDC update, which refined its promises: peak emissions before 2030 and net-zero before 2060.

But the country's new five-year plan does not spell out the steps to reaching this goal.

In the meantime, China continues to build new coal-fired power plants, the single largest source of carbon pollution.

- United States -

The second-largest carbon emitter, the US was a driving force behind the Paris deal, with an initial commitment to cut emissions by 26 to 28 percent by 2025, compared with 2005 levels.

Once in office, President Joe Biden wasted no time in rejoining the accord after his predecessor Donald Trump's decision to backtrack on US commitments.

The country's new NDC calls for lowering greenhouse gas emissions by 50 to 52 percent by 2030. This is compatible to a 2C world, but still falls well short of the effort needed to stay below 1.5C, according to Climate Action Tracker.

- European Union -

The EU committed in 2015 to reducing its CO2 emissions by at least 40 percent by 2030 compared to 1990 levels.

Member states updated this goal in December, aiming to reduce emissions by "at least 55 percent" by the end of this decade -- a goal also in line with 2C of global warming.

Britain, which has now left the EU, has a 2050 net-zero target built into law.

It announced in December it would seek to reduce emissions by 68 percent by 2030, compared with 1990 levels, in sync with the 1.5C target.

- India -

India is the world's third-largest polluter, but has a per-capita carbon footprint far lower than the world's other top emitters.

Like China, the country has unveiled plans to reduce its carbon intensity -- by up to 35 percent this decade compared to 2005 levels.

It has yet to submit a renewed NDC.

- Russia -

Russia, which did not formally join the Paris deal until in 2019, submitted its first carbon-cutting plan in 2020.

Using 1990 levels as a benchmark, Moscow said it plans to reduce CO2 emissions by 30 percent by 2030, a target deemed "critically insufficient" by Climate Action Tracker.

Most recently, Vladimir Putin announced that Russia would aim for carbon neutrality by 2060, but did not provide a roadmap for how the country would get there.

- Japan -

In 2016, Japan committed to a 26-percent reduction in emissions by 2030. Its renewed NDC, issued in March 2020, had the same figure, sparking sharp criticism from carbon monitoring research groups.

But a more ambitious carbon cutting plan unveiled earlier this month sets a goal of reducing emissions by 46 percent by 2030, compared to 2013 levels.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the country would be carbon neutral by 2050.

- Other major emitters -

Among other big emitters, Brazil, Mexico, Australia, South Korea and Indonesia have all resubmitted NDCs that are no more ambitious -- and in the case of Mexico and Brazil even less ambitious -- than before, according to experts.

Canada, South Africa and Argentina, by contrast, have all boosted their carbon-cutting commitments over the next five years.

Last week, Saudi Arabia pledged to be "net zero", or carbon neutral, by 2060, but announced no plans to curtail oil and gas exports.

Turkey recently announced its ratification of the Paris treaty, and its first NDC may soon follow.

G20 nations -- holding a summit in Rome this weekend -- represent more than 75 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

- Carbon neutrality -

More and more governments are committing to achieve net zero emissions by mid-century.

So far, 49 countries accounting for 57 percent of global emissions -- including all EU member states, Britain and the United States -- have make formal or legal commitments, according to the UN Environment Programme.

Any credible pathway toward global net-zero in 2050 will require slashing carbon emissions by 45 percent by 2030, according to the UN.

But 2019 was a record year for emissions, which are rapidly climbing back to pre-pandemic levels, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).


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India vows to take up 'climate justice' combat at COP26
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India will be a fighter for "climate justice" at the upcoming COP26 summit, seeking to make rich nations pay for measures to ease rising temperatures, the country's environment minister said Wednesday. And the world's third biggest source of greenhouse gases is not yet guaranteeing that it will offer new mitigation efforts at the crucial conference which starts Sunday in Glasgow. India, along with the world's leading gas emitter China, is among dozens of countries still to submit fresh plans for ... read more

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