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Protesters during a climate demonstration in London last week. SIPA USA/PA Images

'Our fragile planet is hanging by a thread': COP26 deal agreed by global leaders

Negotiations ran into overtime at the summit with some last-minute changes to the final deal.

AN AGREEMENT HAS been reached between almost every country in the world at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow.

The UN conference was due to end on Friday evening but it went into overtime while negotiators worked to find consensus on a number of key issues included in the final Glasgow Climate Pact.

These crucial issues include the terms of a global carbon trading market and addressing climate finance for developing countries to help deal with the impacts of climate change. 

A $100 billion target for funds from developed nations to help developing countries adapt to climate change was not reached.

Hitting this goal was seen by many as the determination for whether this summit was a success or a failure, but there are many elements to consider in this assessment. 

On carbon markets, Laurence Tubiana, who helped forge the 2015 Paris Agreement, said that the new text had “closed some of the egregious loopholes, such as double counting”.

“But it is not enough to stop bad faith companies and countries gaming the system,” she told AFP, adding that a watchdog would need to monitor the implementation of the markets.

The pact also “requests parties to revisit and strengthen the 2030 targets in their nationally determined contributions (NDCs) as necessary to align with the Paris Agreement temperature goal by the end of 2022″. 

“Requests” in UN text is close to “must do”, and some countries were not keen on accelerating the timetable.

Pledges put forward for this summit still fall far short of the 1.5 degree Celsius temperature goal, instead bringing the world to about a 2.7 degree rise this century. 

Observers said this agreement also fell far short of what is needed to help countries adapt to climate change and deal with the impacts of extreme weather events already occurring around the world. 

Mohamed Adow, director of energy and climate think tank PowerShift Africa, said that “the needs of the world’s vulnerable people have been sacrificed on the altar of the rich world’s selfishness”.

The secretary general of the UN António Guterres said the texts approved at the conference are a “compromise”. 

“They take important steps, but unfortunately the collective political will was not enough to overcome some deep contradictions,” he said at the conclusion of the summit. 

“Our fragile planet is hanging by a thread… It is time to go into emergency mode — or our chance of reaching net zero will itself be zero.”

He added that COP27 “starts now”. 

Fossil fuels

The Environment Minister Eamon Ryan said it was “deeply disappointing” that the language around phasing out coal and fossil fuel subsidies was watered down in the final pact.  

An initial draft of the conference ‘cover decision’ called on countries to “accelerate the phase out of coal and fossil fuel subsidies”. A more recent draft called for acceleration of the phase out of “unabated coal and inefficient fossil fuel subsidies”. 

However, in a last-minute change to the Glasgow Pact – following a push by India and China – the language was reduced even further from escalating the “phase out” of unabated coal, to “phase down”, prompting angry responses from European and vulnerable countries.

“Glasgow has injected fresh momentum in the fight against climate change. We now have to go home and prove it will result in real action that protects people and the planet, and provide a just transition and a better economy for all,” Minister Ryan said.

Here are some of the key points about COP26: 

  • The summit began on 31 October and was due to end yesterday but, as is often the case with COP, it ran into extra time. 
  • Delegates and politicians from every country in the world came to Glasgow to discuss how they plan to cut emissions. 
  • For an agreement to be reached, every country must sign up to the terms hashed out between nations in intense and technical negotiations. 
  • Pledges and promises are focused on the ultimate goal of the Paris Agreement reached in 2015 – to limit the global temperature increase to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius and preferably to 1.5 degrees.
  • Plans put forward at this summit leave the world at around 2.7 degrees of warming this century. At the summit, delegates said they want to “keep 1.5 alive” as those from the Global South and developing countries said the 1.5 degree goal is “life or death” for people in their countries.
  • Alongside thousands of delegates and officials, activists from all around the world were in Glasgow over the past few weeks protesting for climate action.
  • Greta Thunberg last week called the summit a “failure” and has famously criticised the “blah, blah, blah” of the discussions. 

When the agreement was reached, Thunberg said ”the real work continues outside these halls. And we will never give up, ever”. 

Former president Mary Robinson said the COP26 summit “made some progress, but nowhere near enough to avoid climate disaster”.

“While millions around the world are already in crisis, not enough leaders were in crisis mode. People will see this as a historically shameful dereliction of duty.”

Trócaire head of policy and advocacy Siobhan Curran criticised that there was no establishment of loss and damage funding in the Glasgow deal.

Curran said wealthy countries have “turned their backs on indigenous communities, small-scale farmers, women and girls who desperately need support to recover and rebuild after climate disasters. This is a matter of great injustice.”

She said: “We are in an emergency, and we needed world leaders to act like we are in an emergency. The clock is ticking. People are experiencing devastating consequences of climate inaction right now.” 

The secretary general of Amnesty, Agnès Callamard, said COP26 “failed to deliver an outcome that protects the planet or people”.

“Throughout their negotiations, our leaders have made choices that ignore, chip away or bargain away our rights as human beings, often discarding the most marginalised communities around the world as expendable collateral damage.”

Professor John Sweeney from Maynooth University told The Journal that the softening of this language around fossil fuels doesn’t keep the 1.5 degree goal “alive”.

“I think the language is so loose that it’s almost business as usual for many countries,” he said.

Additional reporting by Eoghan Dalton and AFP

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38 Comments
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    Mute Derek Anderson
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:15 PM

    So they have all agreed on how much extra taxation is needed to save the world.

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    Mute DJ François
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:25 PM

    @Derek Anderson: nope.

    38
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    Mute TheKloppKop
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:50 PM

    For an example. Moving to an electric family car costs about €45k – €60k which most of us don’t have to spend on a car. How is the regular working person or family to go green when it’s financially crippling.

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    Mute Mill Miller
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:54 PM

    @TheKloppKop: the year 2180 will do

    20
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    Mute Bull McCabe
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:36 PM

    @TheKloppKop: that’s just your transportation! Retrofit your house to the new standard and add another €100,000 on minimum

    89
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    Mute John brett
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:45 PM

    How come our planet is after becoming so fragile all of a sudden. Another plan to restrict people’s movement.

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    Mute Sue Kelly
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:56 PM

    @John brett: where are you getting this all of a Sudden, they have been saying this decades.

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    Mute Vonvonic
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:01 PM

    @Sue Kelly: Yes they have been saying this for decades. That’s why people are complacent. They are doing nowhere near enough to address the problem they are talking about. People think we have plentry of time. And let’s face it. Very few are prepared to make the sacrifices that are realistically needed to make the difference; you and me included.

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:07 PM

    @John brett: planet has always been fragile, a combination of 6 Celsius warming and/or over hunting killed off the Giant Irish Elk, the mammoth, wolly rhinoceros, dire wolves, saber toothed tigers, North America Camels and horses, and many other megafauna, and also 2 subspecies of humans (Neanderthal and Devensovan).

    We’ve been very lucky these past 10,000 years, global temperature have hardly varied by 1 degree Celsius, that said a little further warming was enough to turn the Sahara from a green oasis to a desert by 6000 years ago. That happened over several thousand years, not 100.

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    Mute The Firestarter
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:33 PM

    @Vonvonic: What sacrifices would that be Sue? I recycle as much as is humanly possible, I try not to turn on the heat unless it’s baltic, I cycle to work, and much and all as I’d love to buy an electric car, I couldn’t afford one. Been green comes at a great cost which the average person can’t afford, so what I outlined earlier is about all I can contribute.

    47
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    Mute Vonvonic
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:43 PM

    @The Firestarter: You shouldn’t personalise what I’ve said. Greta is right. To solve this problem is going to take wholesale structural changes on how we live… all of us. I don’t see it happening to be honest… we’re way to find of our stuff for that.

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    Mute Vonvonic
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:44 PM

    @Vonvonic: fond

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    Mute Anna Carr
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:53 PM

    @Vonvonic: that’s baloney. I swear that gremlins head will do a 360 one of these days. I can’t afford to be green. Even the new refill deodorant is €25 or something. I can get 2 pairs of jeans for that.

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    Mute Nollaig Ó Ceallaigh
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    Nov 13th 2021, 10:38 PM

    @The Firestarter: Sure even if you got an electric car eventually you won’t even be able to charge the thing. Our energy policy for the future seems to revolve around wind…

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    Mute marcusmckenna
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:50 PM

    Unless China and American come on board we are at nothing.

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    Mute Anna Carr
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:54 PM

    @marcusmckenna: absolutely. Well said

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    Mute Alan Dunne
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    Nov 14th 2021, 2:33 AM

    @Anna Carr: Their choices shouldn’t impact ours. We already owe them 100 years of carbon emissions, and their excessive emissions in the last 2 decades are one of the sole stimuli that prevented total global collapse post 2008.

    Regardless, if just Europe went carbon neutral by 2030 it would still buy more time for the transition.
    This needs to be done. And any contribution will help stave off complete catastrophe and save some extra fraction of our civilisation

    If you think I’m being dramatic: it’s accepted that 1.5°+ of heating will doom vulnerable nations. This puts us on course for 2.7°. That will doom the southern stretches of the north and have catastrophic impacts on the productivity of farmlands.

    It’s the end of our civilisation.
    Anything that can delay that will help.

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    Mute On the right side
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    Nov 14th 2021, 11:40 AM

    @Alan Dunne: We already owe them 100 years of carbon emissions…lol

    Unlike Europe China has been using coal for 6,000 years

    China & India had an iron industry in 1300BC, they were mass producing iron and later steel products 1,000 years before Europe, the iron & later steel industry became a state monopoly in China in 200BC.

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    Mute Thomas Byrne
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:03 PM

    Yep, so if we just get people to pay more taxes the Climate God will be Appeased and will not destroy us.

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    Mute Keith O Hanlon
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:50 PM

    How wonderful now could they take Eamonn Ryan and send him to MARS

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    Mute Colette Mooney
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:24 PM

    Ireland is but a dot in the Atlantic Ocean so no matter what we do will make no difference but Irish people will pay the price in taxes

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    Mute Alan Dunne
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    Nov 14th 2021, 2:38 AM

    @Colette Mooney: you’re correct of course that carbon taxes have very little to do with limiting the climate catastrophe but if Ireland were to decide to act effectively, equitably, and immediately, even alone, it’s not something we should hesitate to do.
    Developing energy independence, sustainable farming, these are things that will stand us in very good stead to face whats coming.
    And though our actions alone won’t stop it, they will delay it, even marginally, and even a delay can help us avert civilisational catastrophe if everyone gets on board eventually.

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    Mute Shaun Gallagher
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:59 PM

    Followed it a lot this week to see what could be done and all I heard was some of the best fiction speeches you’ll ever hear

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    Mute Charles Barker
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:25 PM

    If you and me would stop buying tat and trashing the planet.. In other words the root cause of the problem it seems to me, is insatiable consumerism. This Christmas is a good place to start.

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    Mute Conor Mc Cluskey
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    Nov 13th 2021, 10:54 PM

    @Charles Barker: well said

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    Mute Maurizio
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:51 PM

    Forget about Ireland….have a look at the 16 lane Highways in LA full of large 4 x 4 ‘s with 5ltr engines

    52
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    Mute Stephen Byrne
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:02 PM

    COP-OUT26, nothing of real substance agreed. India, USA, China and Russia are inserting loopholes which can effectively negate any commitments.

    50
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    Mute Stiofán Ó Cearnaigh
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:25 PM

    The biggest load of ballix

    51
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    Mute Vonvonic
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:48 PM

    @Stiofán Ó Cearnaigh: I’d say you wouldn’t be able to elaborate on that by even two or three sentences.

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    Mute The only INFP in Ireland
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:03 PM

    Any mention of the rainforests?

    31
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    Mute David Van-Standen
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:59 PM

    I feel sorry for the people that believe the aspirational political doublespeak and rhetoric that comes from politicians at these summits.
    Politicians speaking about climate change or carbon emissions should have to wear and display corporate sponsorship, in the same way as motor racing drivers do.
    It’s much more revealing to look at what the any past commitments have resulted in on these issues, rather than the can kicking soundbites which are meant to delfate and negate the legitimate arguments and campaigns, which challenge the financial interests of their corporate sponsors.

    They operate on a simple formula, issue a meaningful soundbite to placate the masses, over a long enough timeframe so they think its being addressed, but they also dont expect to see results any time soon..

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    Mute Anna Carr
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    Nov 13th 2021, 9:49 PM

    Anything there that won’t be completely useless and cost us a fortune?

    24
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    Mute Nollaig Ó Ceallaigh
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    Nov 13th 2021, 10:53 PM

    @Anna Carr: Rumour has it Eamon Ryan returned with massive Euro signs in his eyes and a strange, twisted smile. Must have gone really well!

    18
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    Mute Kev Dunne
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    Nov 13th 2021, 11:55 PM

    Ugh god you lot give over about tax and the cost of this. Do you want to live or not? Do you want a safe world for your kids? The economy is what we make it. Nature doesn’t care about it. Which do you think would win? Nature or the economy? Hint: one had been around a lot longer and has survived mass extinction before.

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    Mute coastal views
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    Nov 13th 2021, 8:51 PM

    Órla is busy typing

    6
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    Mute Stan Papusa
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    Nov 14th 2021, 10:51 AM

    Interestingly there’s no mention of Germany’s stance on this (who, you know, also happens to be EU’s powerhouse): https://www.cleanenergywire.org/news/government-dispute-over-e-fuels-stops-germany-signing-cop26-car-pledge
    Nor is there any mention of where the likes of Volkswagen, Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Hyundai, and BMW stand wrt the issue.

    One wonders why.. Could it be that by creating the notion that everyone is (and must be) behind this, additional taxes and cost of living skyrocketing will be easier to swallow? Talking about selective reporting 101…

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    Mute pat maher
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    Nov 14th 2021, 1:59 PM

    Why don’t just provide us all with electric cars if they are that concerned.

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    Nov 14th 2021, 3:39 PM

    A lot of people are being left behind in the rush to be green.
    Not that they will notice as smugness goes with the gig.
    The idea that everybody can walk and cycle everywhere is a typical example.
    The idea that everyone can afford to live a green lifestyle.
    An awful lot of us can barely afford to live at present.
    Of course we don’t matter and we won’t be asked or conducted with.
    Real equality is one of the first casualties of these policies.
    Rules are regulations don’t count anymore.
    Just say your saving the planet and you get away with anything.

    3
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