logo
Only strong action on emissions can restore economic stability, UN climate chief says

Only strong action on emissions can restore economic stability, UN climate chief says

The Guardian20-05-2025

The climate crisis has raised the price of commodities and exacerbated famine – and only strong action on greenhouse gas emissions can restore economic stability, the UN's climate chief has said.
Simon Stiell, the executive secretary of the UN framework convention on climate change, was speaking in Panama, where recent years of drought drove the water to perilous lows that disrupted international trade.
He said: 'The same droughts that plague the canal are affecting essential commodities worldwide, reducing harvests, emptying shelves, and pushing people into hunger. Famine is back, and the role of global heating cannot be ignored.'
But he said investors around the world were 'ready to hit the go button on huge investments' if they had the right signals from governments.
'Clear and strong climate policies are an antidote to economic uncertainty,' he said. 'Climate policy can help get trade flowing and economies growing, and prevent wildly destructive climate impacts.'
Governments are supposed to come forward within the next few months with new national plans on greenhouse gas emissions. Stiell said: 'In the past, climate plans have often focused mainly on cuts – cuts to greenhouse gas emissions and to old-fashioned energy. This new generation of climate plans are really about growth: growing industries and economies, and building a better future. One where nature is protected, and where people have better opportunities.'
He added: 'Done right, these plans can attract a bonanza of benefits: more jobs, more revenue, and a virtuous cycle of increased investment.'
Stiell also warned against 'a two-speed transition, where some countries race ahead with clean energy and climate resilience and leave others behind'. However, the climate finance that poor countries need to increase renewable energy investment and protect against the ravages of climate breakdown is under increasing threat.
The withdrawal of the US from the Paris agreement and the Trump administration's dismantling of most forms of overseas aid will leave tens of billions of dollars lacking in the coming years. Support from other developed countries looks unlikely to fill the gap.
The UK has also slashed overseas aid, from 0.5% to 0.3% of national GDP. Although Downing Street has previously indicated to the Guardian that the current climate finance pledge, of spending £11.6bn from 2021 to 2026, would be ringfenced, there are concerns that it could be watered down, and no certainty over what will follow beyond next year.
A group of 80 civil society organisations has written to the prime minister to point out that taxing fossil fuel interests could pay for current climate finance pledges many times over.
Over the next five years, the UK could raise £115bn by measures including making permanent the windfall levy on the excess profits of fossil fuel producers; redirecting the current subsidies to fossil fuels; taxing luxury travel such as private jets and super-yachts; and imposing a small tax on the super-wealthy.
In a letter seen by the Guardian, they also pointed out that opinion polls showed strong support for such measures among voters.
Catherine Pettengell, the executive director of Climate Action Network UK, said: 'Climate action is in everyone's interests, for stability and prosperity at home and all around the world. The UK has demonstrated leadership with its [national plan for cutting greenhouse gas emissions], but domestic action alone is not sufficient. The real test of UK climate leadership is the provision of climate finance to those least responsible but suffering the most devastating impacts of climate change.
'As the fifth largest historical emitter and sixth largest economy, the UK has both the responsibility and the capability to do far more to invest in the climate action needed and to ensure no one is left behind in the domestic and global transition.'
Heidi Chow, the executive director of the charity Debt Justice, said: 'The countries least responsible for the climate emergency are the worst affected, while being pushed into debt as a result. The resources needed for climate action are being siphoned off to repay wealthy lenders. The UK should provide grant-based climate finance so that countries are not driven deeper into debt.'
Signatories to the letter included Action Aid, Concern Worldwide, Greenpeace, Oxfam, Save the Children and the RSPB.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australian government to declare almost a third of its oceans ‘highly protected' in the next five years
Australian government to declare almost a third of its oceans ‘highly protected' in the next five years

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Australian government to declare almost a third of its oceans ‘highly protected' in the next five years

The Australian government plans to declare 30% of its ocean 'highly protected' by 2030, raising expectations from conservationists it will ban fishing and drilling in nearly a third of the country's waters. The environment minister, Murray Watt, told the UN Ocean Conference in France a review of 44 of Australia's marine parks would 'lay the foundation' to increase the area of the country's ocean with higher levels of protection. Some 52% of Australia's ocean area has previously been declared marine park since the late 1990s, giving different levels of protection to wildlife and habitats, but only 24% has levels of protection that keep out all forms of fishing and extraction. 'It's clear that Australia can achieve 30% of our marine protected area estate in highly protected areas by 2030 and a three-year review of our remaining 44 marine marks will lay the foundation for this,' Watt said. The term 'highly protected' means all extractive activities are banned – which can include fishing, drilling and mining. Conservationists welcomed the commitment, but said the ocean was also under assault from global heating and Australia needed to set more ambitious goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions for 2035, beyond the current 2030 goal of a 43% cut, based on 2005 levels, by 2030. Watt told a reception at the conference that Australia protected 'more ocean than any other country on Earth' and 1.3m sq km of highly protected areas had been added in the past three years – an area almost the size of the Northern Territory. Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Morton's Clear Air column as a free newsletter 'A healthy ocean is critical to Australia's environment, economy and wellbeing,' Watt said. 'Australia may be a large country, but our ocean territory is bigger than our land mass and is central to our national identity.' Watt also confirmed the government would introduce legislation before the end of the year to allow the ratification of a high seas biodiversity treaty, which the country signed in September 2023 but had not yet ratified. Christabel Mitchell, the oceans director at Pew Charitable Trusts, said: 'Fully protected marine sanctuaries are the heart of a healthy ocean. They are critical breeding and feeding grounds for the fish, seals, whales, turtles and other marine life which go on to populate our oceans. 'Australia has some of the most diverse and magnificent oceans on the planet and it's our privilege and responsibility to protect them.' As reported in the Guardian, swathes of corals on reefs across vast areas of Western Australian coastline have died in recent months after an unprecedented marine heatwave scientists said was fuelled by global heating. Adele Pedder, a campaigner for marine protected areas at the Australian Marine Conservation Society, said some of Australia's most critical areas were still under-protected, but 'increased protection needed to be matched by increased ambition on climate change'. Sign up to Clear Air Australia Adam Morton brings you incisive analysis about the politics and impact of the climate crisis after newsletter promotion Pedder said 'highly protected' marine areas excluded all fishing and extractive activities, such as drilling. She said: 'Science has shown us that these fully protected areas give resilience to ecosystems so they have a fighting chance in the face of climate change.' Recent approvals of fossil fuel projects showed the weakness in the country's environment laws 'that the government absolutely needs to address', she said. The Albanese government has promised to set an emissions reduction target for 2035 ahead of this November's UN climate talks in Brazil. Richard Leck, the head of oceans at WWF Australia, said that target needed to be in line with keep global heating to 1.5C – a 'critical threshold' for coral reefs. Australia's commitment to increasing marine sanctuaries and ratifying the high seas treaty was a 'significant step forward', he said. A new documentary from David Attenborough, called Ocean, has also called on the UN Ocean Conference to ratify the high seas treaty and push for the goal to have 30% of the planet's oceans highly protected in areas known as marine sanctuaries. 'Australia has just committed to both the actions called for by Sir David Attenborough,' Leck said. 'Ocean ecosystems are incredibly resilient when you reduce the threats that they face. We see this time and time again. Marine sanctuaries aren't just for biodiversity. They're an insurance policy for the fishing industry as well.'

Mothin Ali challenges Greens' ‘middle class' image as he enters deputy race
Mothin Ali challenges Greens' ‘middle class' image as he enters deputy race

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Mothin Ali challenges Greens' ‘middle class' image as he enters deputy race

A Green councillor who intervened to stop rioters and received death threats for vocal support for Gaza is running to replace Zack Polanski as deputy leader of the party. Mothin Ali, of Gipton and Harehills ward in Leeds – a former Labour stronghold – said he wanted to champion working-class communities, challenge the idea of the Greens as a 'middle-class party' and ensure it represents 'a diverse Britain increasingly threatened by the far right'. Ali, 43, said the support he got from voters in Gipton, 'a traditionally white working-class community', as well as diverse Harehills, reflected unifying concerns and his commitment to all, adding: 'We're not playing identity politics games.' Launching his candidacy, Ali said: 'A lot of the problems white working-class communities face, a lot of ethnic minorities face, a lot of rural communities face. We're all faced by the cost of living; climate change is very real. 'We have to address climate change, we have to address poverty, we have to address the lack of opportunities, the access to good education, the health deserts where people can't get a dentist appointment, these are not ethnic minority problems. These are not working-class problems. These are problems that are structural in our society. 'We have to take care of every single person – if that means the rich have to pay a little bit more, absolutely right.' Ali, who organised the City of Belonging event in Leeds after rioting broke out in Harehills in July 2024, said he wanted to spread the 'grassroots community organising' he had done in the city across the UK to build a 'people-powered movement'. 'We've got to keep organising our communities, regardless of whether they're black, brown, Muslim, Jewish or Christian – the common problems that we face, we face together,' he added. Ali said the 'Overton window shifting more to the right' was creating a 'climate of fear' among his constituents in a poor area where people 'look out for one another'. In July last year Ali was falsely accused of rioting in Harehills by the far-right activist Tommy Robinson, after he intervened to stop arson and violence. Ali said he had 'no regrets' about vocal support for Gaza in the local election victory speech in May last year, which led to him getting threats, but said he should have been 'more considered' in language he used on X after 7 October, later apologising. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion An accountant, YouTuber and permaculture teacher, Ali is the third candidate to announce their bid for the Greens' deputy leadership, after Antoinette Fernandez and Thomas Daw. The party's current deputy leader, Zack Polanski, is running for the leadership. The Green party of England and Wales, with 859 councillors and four MPs, is positioning itself as the 'antidote' to Nigel Farage's Reform UK, which has 824 councillors and five MPs across England, Wales and Scotland. The Greens' vote share among people aged 18 to 24 in the 2024 general election was 19%, second to Labour and ahead of Reform on 8%, while their general election vote share among minority ethnic voters rose by 9%.

China's exports up 4.8% in May as shipments to the US fall nearly 10%
China's exports up 4.8% in May as shipments to the US fall nearly 10%

The Independent

time4 hours ago

  • The Independent

China's exports up 4.8% in May as shipments to the US fall nearly 10%

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store