الخميس, يونيو 11, 2026
  • Login
عاشق عُمان
  • أخبار
    • الطقس
    • Oman News
  • مقالات
  • وظائف وتدريب
  • ثقافة وأدب
    • شعر
    • خواطر
    • قصص وروايات
    • مجلس الخليلي للشعر
  • تلفزيون
    • بث أرضي للقناة الرياضية
  • لا للشائعات
  • المنتديات
No Result
View All Result
عاشق عُمان
No Result
View All Result




Home Oman News

Why Climate Change Conference (COP26) now under way will fail?

3 نوفمبر، 2021
in Oman News
When Mama Dog didn't expect the warm welcome…

The United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) now under way in Glasgow might conclude with a big international agreement. But whatever tactical successes are achieved at COP26, the results are likely to mark a strategic setback for humanity – at least when compared to the hopes of climate activists.

The world is missing target after target. This should not be surprising: while a growing number of countries have set net-zero targets, for example, very few have credible plans to meet them. And even if we did meet existing targets, that would not be enough to achieve the 2015 Paris climate agreement’s main goal: limiting global warming to 1.5℃ above pre-industrial levels.

In fact, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest report warns that the planet is likely to reach the 1.5℃ limit in the early 2030s. As long as multilateral engagement is defined by nationalism, power politics, and emotion, rather than solidarity, law, and science, our future will continue to grow bleaker.

At the height of the Cold War, the American television series The Outer Limits told the story of an idealistic group of scientists staging a fake alien invasion of Earth, in the misguided hope that they could avert nuclear Armageddon by giving the world a common enemy against which to unite. When faced with the prospect of extinction, the logic went, the Soviet Union and the United States would turn their attention from competition to shared survival.

Today, nobody needs to contrive a common cause. Climate change poses as great a threat as any alien invasion. But, far from shocking national leaders out of their petty competition, it is being wielded as a weapon in a many-sided propaganda war. From Brazil and Australia to China and the US, countries are trying to game climate negotiations in order to shift the costs of adaptation onto others.

For example, the Brazilian government is trying to get the world to pay it to stop destroying the Amazon rainforest. Chinese President Xi Jinping will participate in COP26 only by video link, and Russian President Vladimir Putin might not attend at all.

Meanwhile, the advanced economies – including those that proudly claim to be committed to climate action – have broken their promise to provide $100 billion annually to support the climate transition in the Global South. And even if they did deliver, it wouldn’t be enough.

Developed economies are finding increasingly coercive ways of shaping other countries’ behavior. Commitments by most of the Western and multilateral development banks to stop financing coal (now joined by China) restrict options for grid expansion in developing countries where demand for power is growing rapidly.

Influential countries have also urged the International Monetary Fund to attach green conditions to debt relief for poor countries, as well as to its new allocation of special drawing rights (the IMF’s reserve asset). And the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism – a non-trade barrier intended to force exporters to Europe to shift to green production – disproportionately hurts small emitters in Africa and Eastern Europe with a lot to lose.

This is not to disparage coal bans, green financing, and carbon pricing. On the contrary, these tools have a crucial role to play in changing how the global economy works. But that doesn’t mean we can disregard the (very serious) consequences for developing economies. Instead, we need to create a new grand bargain focused on supporting adaptation in the developing world.

More broadly, we must ensure that any multilateral agreement for tackling climate change is governed by international law, rather than dependent on the will of individual countries. And decision-making should be driven by scientific truths, not political slogans.

The Paris climate agreement’s predecessor, the Kyoto Protocol, adopted in 1997, was broadly in line with this approach: it was a multilateral treaty, with legally binding international targets determined by the world’s best scientists. But the Protocol also had many flaws, and it didn’t end up going far.

The Paris accord took a very different tack. It was hailed as a triumph, because hopes for any agreement were so low. But it entailed a major compromise: it was based on non-binding commitments known as Nationally Determined Contributions. Countries could simply pursue the energy policies on which they had already decided, while pretending they were working together to tackle climate change. Not surprisingly, current NDCs are wholly inadequate to achieve the agreement’s stated goals.

To be sure, climate-change COPs have often made important – if often procedural, boring, and technical –contributions to the climate fight. But showboating and power politics have stood in the way of real progress. And the media and civil-society circus that surrounds the conferences – intended to enforce accountability and transparency – has often impeded negotiators’ ability to get things done.

More fundamentally, COPs have failed to produce a model of global governance that can tame power politics, let alone forge a sense of shared destiny among countries. And there is little reason to believe this time will be different.

Copy right: Project Syndicate 2021

The author is a Co-Founder and Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations and the author of The Age of Unpeace

Share196Tweet123
Previous Post

منصة دوام تعلن وظائف شاغرة

Next Post

شركة عمانتل للاتصالات تعلن وظائف شاغرة

أحدث المنشورات

تتويج بنك مسقط بجائزة أفضل علامة تجارية في تجربة الزبائن المخصصة للشركات

Bank Muscat Named Best Brand in Customer Experience in Corporate Banking Category

11 يونيو، 2026
الشركة العُمانية للنطاق العريض ووزارة التعليم توقّعان برنامج تعاون لدعم مبادرة “التاجر الصغير” وتعزيز ريادة الأعمال الطلابية

Oman Broadband Company and the Ministry of Education Sign a Cooperation Program to Support the “Al Tajer Al Sagheer” Initiative and Promote Student Entrepreneurship

2 يونيو، 2026
بنك مسقط يواصل الاستثمار في الكفاءات الوطنية عبر إطلاق نسخة جديدة من برنامج “نسور”

Bank Muscat Continues Investing in National Talent with the Launch of New Edition of EAGLEs Programme for Branch Managers

2 يونيو، 2026
احصل على بطاقة الجوهر البلاتينية الائتمانية من بنك مسقط مجاناً

Get Your Al Jawhar Platinum Credit Card from Bank Muscat Free of Charge

1 يونيو، 2026
جهاز الاستثمار العماني يحقق عشرة أضعاف استثماره في شركة كروسو الأمريكية عبر تخارج جزئي

Oman Investment Authority Achieves Tenfold Return on Investment in U.S.-Based Crusoe Through Partial Exit

24 مايو، 2026
شركة كريست للتكنولوجيا تعلن وظيفة شاغرة

شركة كريست للتكنولوجيا تعلن وظيفة شاغرة

24 مايو، 2026
Next Post
شركة عمانتل للاتصالات تعلن وظائف شاغرة

شركة عمانتل للاتصالات تعلن وظائف شاغرة

اترك تعليقاً

لن يتم نشر عنوان بريدك الإلكتروني. الحقول الإلزامية مشار إليها بـ *

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Whatsapp : +96899060010

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • أخبار
    • الطقس
    • Oman News
  • مقالات
  • وظائف وتدريب
  • ثقافة وأدب
    • شعر
    • خواطر
    • قصص وروايات
    • مجلس الخليلي للشعر
  • تلفزيون
    • بث أرضي للقناة الرياضية
  • لا للشائعات
  • المنتديات

Copyright © 2024