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New COP26 Draft Has Surprisingly Ambitious Language on 1.5°C

A surprisingly ambitious step was taken to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the deletion of a single sentence in the latest draft climate agreement being negotiated at the COP26 Climate Conference.

The previous draft stated that countries recognize that limiting global warming “to 1.5°C by 2100 requires rapid, deep and sustained reductions in global greenhouse gas emissions.” The new version omits “2100.”

Under the Paris Agreement signed in 2015, countries agreed to keep the temperature increase to “well below’’ 2°C degrees and try to limit it to 1.5°C compared to pre-industrial levels. Many have been calling for the reduction of emissions in order to reach the lower goal, after the United Nations released a 2018 report showing the dangers to the planet at higher levels. COP26 President Alok Sharma has made “keeping 1.5 alive” his mantra for the outcome of the Glasgow talks.
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Felix Schenuit is a visiting fellow at the Berlin-based SWP Europe research institute. He said that the change in the text was significant. It closes a backdoor that would have allowed the world to heat beyond 1.5°C in the next few decades, before dropping back to that level by 2100 by sucking up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. “Politically, the new version is more ambitious wording,” he said.

voiding an overshoot “requires incredibly rapid emissions reduction,” said Zeke Hausfather, a scientist with Berkeley Earth. However, that’s “not consistent with the level of commitments we’ve seen from countries” at COP26, he added. If countries sign off on the new language, it could mean further COP meetings would be about turning that “recognition” into deliverable climate pledges.

A counterpoint, according to Oliver Geden, who also works at SWP, is that the deletion of 2100 “might be well-intended, but would in fact remove any constraint’’ by when a return from the likely overshoot happens. That’s because most emissions trajectories that keep warming below 1.5°C include overshooting the target first.

Both drafts say that meeting the 1.5°C goal would require “reducing global carbon dioxide emissions by 45% by 2030 relative to the 2010 level and to net zero around mid-century.” The latest version goes one step further, adding that countries also recognize the need for “deep reductions in non-carbon dioxide greenhouse gases.”

If the language makes it into the final communique, it would mark the first time that countries meeting at a COP sign off on the 1.5°C target in line with the 2018 UN report, and it will send the strongest signal yet that they take the goal seriously, said Schenuit. The Group of 20 communique, agreed just before COP26, mentions 1.5°C, but it doesn’t specify how quickly emissions need to be cut to ensure that it’s achieved.

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