Innovating Today for the Homes of Tomorrow
For All Their Talk, Colleges Divest Little After Climate Protest
A 9-Minute Guide To Pope Francis’ Encyclical on Climate Change
‘Snail’s Pace’ in Climate Talks, Weak Pledges Frustrate UN Chief
Climate change pledges submitted so far from the world’s leading economies won’t be enough to keep the planet from warming dangerously, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Monday in New York.
Proposals to reduce heat-trapping emissions need to be “a floor, not a ceiling,” he said.
The global increase in temperatures will exceed 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) under the national pledges already submitted to UN, Ban said. That’s the goal scientists and the UN have set to avoid the worst effects due to global warming.
The proposals submitted to date “will not be enough to place us on a 2-degree pathway,” Ban said.
Without any changes to global emissions, the world is on track to warm by 4 degrees Celsius or more, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Climate Change Janos Pasztor said earlier this month.
World leaders have five months to go before a meeting of almost 200 nations in Paris that’s intended to seal a new global pact to cut planet-warming carbon emissions. If successful, the agreement would be the first ever to require both developed nations like the US and growing economies like China to address climate change.
“The pace of UN negotiations are far too slow,” Ban said. “It’s like a snail’s pace.”
The U.S., the world’s biggest historic source of greenhouse gases, pledged earlier this year to cut its emissions by as much as 28 percent by 2025. The European Union has promised a 40 percent cut by 2030. Several other major economies, including Australia and Japan, have yet to submit climate plans to the UN.
German Wind-to-Hydrogen Plant Takes Car-Fuel Battle to Tesla
Listen Up: Pope Calls for the Replacement of Fossil Fuels, Renewable Energy and Solar Subsidies
Japan's Long-term Energy Plan Shoots for Ultimate Balance in Economics, Environment and Safety
Financing Electric Vehicle Markets in New York and Other States
by APT Translations