16/11/2021
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I got back from COP last Friday and wrote an op ed for the Express on the way home. The directors cut is below. They took this pic while we were there.
Overall I thought the outcome good - the new annual focus on 1.5 degrees and everyoneโs plans to hit it, is a real ratcheting up of focus.
And of course the ending of coal, even if it morphed into โphasing downโ instead of โoutโ - itโs a real historical achievement. Which is quite mad I feel as I write this. We know, the whole world knows, we have to end coal - and end fossil fuels. But this is the first COP in which itโs been possible to include some words in that direction.
As I was telling Mike Graham on Talkradio today - having targets is the most important thing (not exactly what they are or for when) because targets can always we improved, dates reeled in. The most important thing is to have one. And now the world has the target of reducing coal - ending it will come next.
But food is the Cow in the room.
This is Cop ed for the Express;
I came to the Climate Conference (COP26) with low expectations, progress of any meaningful kind seemed unlikely.
But as I leave it looks a lot better than that. On the sidelines but looking like the main event, China and the US have agreed to work together to reduce emissions - itโs really something, the two biggest polluters on the planet forming some kind of mutually assured de carbonisation pact.
The draft agreement from the conference is not signed as I write this, I hope it is, as thereโs has real progress in it. Fossil fuels for the first time are identified as something we have to stop using. Vested interested have prevented this for over a quarter century so far. Progress against the crucial 1.5 degree temperature target will get annual scrutiny. And the promises each country makes (known as NDCs) are going to be reviewed each year too. All of this ratchets up the focus.
In other signs of progress Boris Johnson has started using the train. Thatโs more important than it might sound.
So my reading of the outcome is like this - weโve written down one of the biggest things we need to do, end fossil fuels - and made provision for annual discussions and target adjustments - to make sure we hit 1.5 degrees. And our prime minister has started to walk the talk. That last one is potentially as important as it is small in the scheme of things. What leaders do matters as much as what they say.
Whatโs missing is the written acknowledgement of the other big thing we need to do - end animal farming. We know we have to but no country yet in the world has been brave enough to say it. Itโs the Cow in the room.
Food needs to be on the Climate menu. Otherwise weโre only looking at half the problem.