My Tunza Family, the Paris Agreement entering into force in time for next week?s UN climate conference is political recognition of a change that is already well underway. The clean energy transition is not just well underway, it?s unstoppable and accelerating. Legally locking-in the Paris Agreement with almost unprecedented speed is yet another strong signal to business and investors that have moved into clean, sustainable models that they did the right thing. In the last 18 months alone we have passed critical political milestones from the delivery of a climate-friendly development agenda to a groundbreaking deal on short-lived climate pollutants, and in real-terms the global rate of decarbonisation has doubled. Now even oil majors are seeking to back renewable energy in a cynical or possibly desperate roll of the dice as they know they are trapped on the wrong side of history.
Countries have agreed to act, and must do so increasingly fast given the UN has again warned our planet remains on the road to more than 3DegC of warming. Boosting national climate actions and filling gaps in the finance deal that rich countries have put on the table to support the poorest are key points for negotiators at COP22 in Morocco. This is no time for the EU to cut policy support for renewables, for the US to trample human rights in the name of dirty pipeline construction, or for Australia to continue abrogating its responsibilities on emissions reductions and coal. Countries have to build on the platform of the Paris Agreement and a good way to start would be to kick polluters, like the World Coal Association, out of the UN climate negotiations for good.
Accelerating the transition away from fossil fuels is the only way to prevent a global children?s health crisis and ?an avoidable human tragedy?. The last week has offered some serious evidence of the physical dangers posed by a fossil-powered economy. As choking smog suffocated Diwali celebrations in India and 33 workers tragically lost their lives in a coal mine in China, news broke that air pollution is responsible for the deaths of 600,000 children under the age of five annually, and 300 million children around the world are living in areas subject to extreme levels of toxic fumes. The World Health Organisation and UNICEF have now thrown their weight behind the renewable energy transition that if scaled up could save 100,000 lives a year in China, create 470,000 clean jobs in the US and save the EU $33billion a year in dirty energy imports.
11 Comments
good report
Posted 07-02-2018 21:50
thanks for sharing
Posted 07-02-2018 21:47
Thanks, everyone. Also, Heonjun, i understand your sentiment and i always provide references for posts which i do not owe. With this one, i had the authors consent to post without referencing. Thank you and lets see what COP22 brings us
Posted 08-11-2016 16:01
Thanks for sharing Joshua! I just want to point out one thing. Please, if you copy certain phrases, sentences or paragraphs. Make sure to give the reference. I found an article that has the same sentences with yours and I'd not be happy if i were the original writer. But, that said, I really appreciate your effort to share the story. Thanks a lot!
Posted 08-11-2016 14:41
This is good hope
Posted 08-11-2016 02:30
Thanks for sharing with us, Joshua! I am also very excited about this news. Tell us if you hear more regarding this issue! Have a great day : )
Posted 07-11-2016 19:33
Recently read the UN News about this. Hope this will turn out very effective.
Posted 06-11-2016 12:15
I'm really excited about this.
Posted 06-11-2016 04:12
Thanks for sharing
Posted 05-11-2016 23:37
Yeah, Heard it -it's indeed a good news to cherish and rely on.
Posted 05-11-2016 02:41
Yes I heard about this on Facebook and as really happy to read about it.....
Posted 05-11-2016 01:39