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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Moscow (AFP) Nov 3, 2021
The Kremlin on Wednesday rejected US President Joe Biden's criticism of President Vladimir Putin for not showing up at the COP26 summit, saying Moscow is serious about climate change. "We disagree," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked about Biden's accusation that China and Russia were failing to show leadership on climate change. "We are certainly not minimising the importance of the event in Glasgow, but Russia's actions are consistent and thoughtful and serious," he said. Biden on Tuesday lashed out at Putin for not attending the conference, saying: "His tundra is burning -- literally, the tundra is burning. He has serious, serious climate problems, and he is mum on willingness to do anything." Peskov said Moscow was well aware of the effects of climate change and was in fact facing "more serious challenges" than other countries. "The tundra really is on fire. But let's not forget that forests are burning in California, forests are burning in Turkey, and in other countries," he said. Peskov said Russia had taken a "very responsible" position on climate change with long-term plans to reduce emissions and diversify energy sources. He said Biden may not have been aware of these plans when he spoke and that when the two leaders next meet in person, "President Putin will have a great opportunity to tell President Biden what we are doing on the climate". Peskov said last month that Putin would not attend COP26. He gave no reason, though Putin has rarely travelled outside Russia since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, except for a summit with Biden in Geneva in June. Putin said last month that Russia -- the fourth-highest carbon emitter -- was aiming for carbon neutrality by 2060. That followed an earlier pledge to cut carbon emissions to below the level of the European Union by 2050. For years Putin was notorious for his scepticism about man-made global warming and saying Russia stands to benefit from it. But his approach has changed as Russia -- one of the world's biggest producers of oil and gas -- sees the devastating effects of climate change. The country has set numerous heat records in recent years, and the rising temperatures have contributed to severe floods and forest fires that have affected Siberia with increasing regularity.
China hits back after Biden criticises Xi's COP26 no-show Xi -- who leads the planet's largest emitter of the greenhouse gases responsible for climate change -- has not travelled outside of China since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic and has not joined world leaders for COP26. Biden on Tuesday had launched blistering criticism of the Chinese and Russian leaders for not attending the summit. "Actions speak louder than words," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin responded Wednesday. "What we need in order to deal with climate change is concrete action rather than empty words," he added. "China's actions in response to climate change are real." He also made a jibe at Washington by adding that the United States pulling out of the Paris Agreement under Biden's predecessor Donald Trump had harmed global climate governance and the implementation of the accord. Biden has apologised for Trump's decision. COP26 has been billed as vital for the continued viability of the 2015 Paris Agreement under which nations promised to limit global temperature rises to "well below" 2C, and to work for a safer 1.5C cap. At the summit on Tuesday, nearly one hundred nations joined a US and European Union initiative to cut emissions of methane -- a potent greenhouse gas -- by at least 30 percent this decade, with China among notable absentees. Experts say the initiative could have a powerful short-term impact on global heating. "It just is a gigantic issue and they walked away. How do you do that and claim to be able to have any leadership?" Biden told journalists before flying out of Glasgow. "It's been a big mistake, quite frankly, for China not showing up. The rest of the world looked at China and said: 'What value are they providing?'"
![]() ![]() Earth's orbit affects millennial climate variability Beijing, China (SPX) Nov 03, 2021 Abundant geological evidence demonstrates that Earth's climate has experienced millennial-scale variability superimposed on glacial-interglacial fluctuations through the Pleistocene. The magnitude of millennial climate variability has been linked to glacial cycles over the past 800 thousand years?(kyr). For the period before the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, when global glaciations were less pronounced but more frequent, scientists had been unable to identify the linkage between abrupt climate chang ... read more
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