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UN chief says countries must move 'further and faster' to meet new climate targets

On Wednesday, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres called on all parties to the Paris Climate Agreement to develop new climate plans that would achieve greater and faster reductions in emissions than what they have already committed to.

Guterres hosts a climate leaders' summit Wednesday on the sidelines the U.N. General Assembly. He has asked the countries to announce new climate targets in order to generate momentum for the global COP30 Climate Negotiations in November in Brazil.

The summit takes place a day after U.S. president Donald Trump used the UNGA address to call climate change a "con-job" and to criticize countries such as EU member states and China who embrace renewable energy technologies.

The United States, which is the world's largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases and the second-largest emitter after China, has withdrawn from the Paris Agreement, a 10-year old climate pact aimed at preventing global temperatures from increasing beyond 1.5 degrees Celsius by means of national climate plans.

Guterres stated in prepared remarks that the Paris Agreement had made a significant difference. He added that, since its adoption in 2015, global temperatures have dropped from 4 degrees C to 2,6 degrees C if national climate plans were fully implemented.

He said, "We need to create new plans that will go further and faster in 2035."

A document from the EU's negotiating team, seen by, showed that despite the deadline for Wednesday's climate summit, there was no agreement reached on a new U.N. mandated target. Instead, plans were drafted to present a temporary goal which may change in future.

Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air reports that all eyes are on China. The country has pledged to reach net-zero emissions by 2060. This would require roughly 30% reductions in emissions below the peak levels of 2024, by 2035. (Reporting and editing by Alistair Bell; Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)