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Climate Week NYC: UN Climate Leader urges action to match the promises

Climate Week NYC: UN Climate Leader urges action to match the promises

Climate Week NYC speakers sent a message loud and clear to world leaders Monday. The global energy transition has begun and is accelerating.

The U.N.’s top climate official began a morning session of the annual event with a call for the world to convert promises into concrete solutions.

Simon Stiell is the executive secretary of UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Climate change has become an existential threat for countries like Antigua and Barbuda, so the premier of Antigua-Barbuda called on wealthy counterparts.

Gaston Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua-Barbuda said: "It turns every storm for small islands into a financial catastrophe."

Leaders pressed to show climate progress even as aid is cut

This week, world leaders will be pressed by the U.N. General Assembly to demonstrate progress in climate change. This is especially true after recent cuts in development aid. Wealthy countries are also juggling war and economic stability.

G20 members Japan, Australia, and Britain recently announced new climate plans or Nationally Determined contributions (NDCs). This week, China and other countries will likely share their latest updates.

John Podesta - former climate advisor for U.S. president Joe Biden - said, "We look now to China, as the world's largest emitter, to fully embrace the Paris Agreement that it helped to craft by releasing an NDC that charts a realistic path to China's goal of achieving net zero emissions before 2060."

This means that by 2035 they will have reduced their emissions by roughly 30%, covering all greenhouse gasses, compared to the peak levels of 2024, as new data shows.

BENEFITS FROM CLEAN ENERGY BOO 'NOT SHARE BY ALL.'

Stiell took the opportunity to acknowledge and celebrate the progress made in the past decade, with COP30 being held in November.

He said that the clean energy transition was booming in almost all major countries, and it had reached $2 trillion in value last year.

But this boom is not even. Stiell stated that the vast benefits of this boom are not distributed equally. Climate disasters continue to hit every economy and society harder. We need to act quickly."

He said that a new global program called Build Clean Now will help accelerate the clean-industry shift.

On Monday, a group that promotes renewable energy announced plans to invest $7.5 billion into green energy in developing nations, including India.

CLIMATE CHANGE IS STILL A "Systemic Risk" WORLDWIDE

Climate change is a systemic risk that affects the entire world, regardless of political debates, differences in regulations across markets, deregulations emerging and reports about corporations deprioritizing ESG. This was stated by Omar Ali, EY Global Financial Services Leader.

Last week, the High Seas Treaty was ratified by countries, establishing the first legal framework to protect the vast ocean zones that are beyond national jurisdiction.

The treaty includes 75 points that cover areas like protecting, caring for, and ensuring responsible usage of marine resources. It also contains a provision requiring environmental impact assessment for economic activities taking place in international waters.

Director general of WWF International Kirsten Schuijt described it as a "monumental accomplishment for ocean conservation," and "a catalyst for collaboration in international waters." (Reporting and editing by Bernadette B. Baum; Additional reporting and editing by Valerie Volcovici, Virginia Furness and Simon Jessop)

(source: Reuters)