COP26: Preliminary draft agreement calls on countries to strengthen national climate plans by the end of 2022

Britain, which is hosting the UN Conference on Climate Change CO226 in Glasgow, today unveiled a draft political decision to be negotiated these days in which countries are invited to reconsider and strengthen their national plans for combating climate change by the end of 2022.

The first draft of the “COP Central Decision” calls on countries to “review and strengthen the 2030 targets in their nationally defined contributions, as necessary to align by the end of 2022 with the agreement’s temperature target” of Paris”.

The draft also reminds countries that under the Paris Agreement they can submit new, more ambitious climate commitments at any time and for the first time call on countries to phase out coal and fossil fuel subsidies.

The decision to seal the COP26 in Glasgow is of great interest in what it can commit countries to do to bridge the gap between their current climate goals and the more ambitious action scientists say is needed. to be undertaken to prevent a catastrophic rise in temperature on the planet.

Diplomats from the nearly 200 countries represented at COP26 will sit down today to negotiate the final text that everyone will be willing to sign when the meeting concludes over the weekend.

Countries that are poorer and more vulnerable to climate change have called on countries to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The impetus for more regular reviews of countries’ plans to combat climate change is considered necessary, as their current commitments for 2030 will lead to a 2.4 degree Celsius rise in global temperature.

The draft, which was released shortly before 08:00 Greek time, also calls on countries to “speed up the phasing out of coal and fossil fuel subsidies”, a demand by activists fighting climate change. and urges developed countries to “gradually increase” their financial support for developing countries so that they can meet their needs to adapt to the effects of climate change.

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Source From: Capital

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