Antonio Guterres, the United Nations Secretary-General, warned on Monday that “unless we collectively change course, there is a high risk of failure” at the much-anticipated U.N. Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland, scheduled in early November. On September 30th, about 35 of the most powerful countries will meet in Milan, Italy, where they will largely decide what happens at Glasgow. Weaker countries will be expected to accept those decisions without protest.
Speaking to reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York City after a closed-door meeting of national leaders to discuss climate policy, Antonio Guterres said “Based on the present commitments of member states, the world is on a catastrophic pathway to 2.7 degrees Celsius of heating, instead of 1.5 we all agreed should be the limit. To limit temperature rise to 1.5 degrees, we need a 45% cut in emissions by 2030 so we can reach carbon neutrality by mid-century. Instead, the commitments made until now by countries imply an increase of 16% in greenhouse gas emissions — not a decrease of 45% — an increase of 16% in greenhouse gas emissions in 2030 compared to 2010 levels.”
This dire warning comes after a summer of droughts, fires, flooding and hurricanes in the U.S. and across the world—we have seemingly reached a new global normal. Where we are headed if we don’t act decisively at Milan and Glasgow is what is already happening in some countries—FAMINE.
While many world leaders talk about the existential threat of climate change, their plans to combat it and thus protect us are severely lacking. Here in the US, President Biden touts his plan, while at the same time he is:
- Signing 2400 new drilling permits by August 1st and on the way to 6000 in his first year, while it took Trump two years to reach that number
- Putting no limits on fracking on private lands and few on public lands
- Supporting the continued construction of major pipelines including Line 3
- Being unwilling to challenge Sen. Manchin’s protection of coal’s future
- Offering only 11.4 billion to help poor countries deal with the ravages largely caused by the emissions of rich countries, while the 2022 military budget for current and past expenses is 3,543 billion
Biden's plan doesn't satisfy what the world is demanding:
Leave fossil fuels in the ground!
Again, please make that simple call today!!!
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