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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Top court gives France three months to show climate efforts
By Clare BYRNE
Paris (AFP) Nov 19, 2020

Youth activists stage virtual climate 'summit'
Paris (AFP) Nov 19, 2020 - More than 350 young people from 145 countries opened a mock climate summit on Thursday, with the real negotiations on how to cope with potentially catastrophic global warming put off until November 2021.

The UN-led talks, to be held in Glasgow under Britain's stewardship, fell afoul of the Covid pandemic, but activists from 18 youth groups -- including Greta Thunberg's Fridays for Future -- are frustrated with the lack of progress.

"If the climate crisis is so urgent why isn't everyone acting like it's an emergency?", said 18-year-old Malaika Collette from Ontario, Canada.

"It's hard to understand why the entire world isn't fighting like their life depends on it."

Climate change impacts are clearly accelerating, say scientists.

Devastating wild fires, record sea ice loss, accelerated sea level rise, more devastating tropical storms and more intense heatwaves all bear the unmistakable fingerprint of rising global temperatures.

2020 could be the hottest year on record, beating out a year -- 2016 -- made warmer by a naturally occurring El Nino.

The nearly 200 signatories to the 2015 Paris climate treaty must submit updated plans, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs), to slash greenhouse gas emissions by the year's end, and youth groups are looking to keep the pressure on.

- Youth 'sidelined' -

"It is so important that world leaders raise their ambition when it comes to climate policy," said Josh Tregale, 18, from Dorset in Britain.

"Too often young climate activists are patronised and cast aside," he added. "We don't want empty words, we want action."

Japan, Europe and Britain have all pledged to be carbon neutral by 2050, and China vowed earlier this year to attain that goal by 2060.

Young people will be living with the consequences of climate change but are too often "sidelined" when it comes to decision-making, said Kenyan organiser Pauline Owiti.

"The involvement of young people in decision making should be a priority," she said. "With Mock COP26 we have the opportunity to contribute something meaningful to society and change the perception of youth leadership."

Discussions at the 12-day virtual meeting will focus on climate justice and education, health and mental wellbeing, green jobs and cutting carbon pollution, the organisers said.

Giving a prominent place to "voices form the global south", the mock summit will culminate in a statement detailing what leaders should agree to at Glasgow in 2021.

Jean Damase Roamba from Burkina Faso said his country faced "all the negative impacts of climate change -- heavy precipitation, floods, drought".

"I dream for an ambitious COP26, and I hope that Mock COP26 will help show the path," he added.

The 196-nation United Nations Climate Change conference, also known as COP26, next November is widely seen as the most crucial since the Paris Agreement was inked five years ago.

In a ruling hailed as "historic" by environmental activists, France's top administrative court on Thursday gave the government a three-month deadline to show it is taking action to meet its commitments on global warming.

The French government, which brokered the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, was hauled before the Council of State by Grande-Synthe, a low-lying northern coastal town that is particularly exposed to the effects of climate change.

The Council, which rules on disputes over public policies, said that "while France has committed itself to reducing its emissions by 40 percent in 2030 compared to 1990 levels, it has, in recent years, regularly exceeded the 'carbon budgets' it had set itself."

It also noted that President Emmanuel Macron's government had, in an April decree, at the height of the first wave of Covid-19 infections, deferred much of the reduction efforts beyond 2020.

Before issuing a final ruling on the matter, the Council gave the government three months to justify "how its refusal to take additional measures is compatible with the respect of the reduction path chosen in order to achieve the targets set for 2030."

Corinne Lepage, a former environment minister and a lawyer for the town of Grande-Synthe, hailed the decision as "historic".

The ruling means that "policies must be more than nice commitments on paper," she said.

- Far off track -

Despite Macron's headline 2017 promise to "make our planet great again" -- a swipe at global-warming denier US President Donald Trump and his pledge to "make America great again" -- France is far off track to meet its commitments under the 2015 treaty.

France's High Council on Climate, an independent body tasked with advising the government on how to reduce carbon emissions, said in a report this year that emissions had fallen by only 0.9 percent in 2019.

That left France "far from the 3 percent annual reduction expected from 2025 onwards to remain on track for carbon neutrality," it said.

In January 2019, Damien Careme, then the Greens mayor of Grande-Synthe, petitioned the Council of State over what he called the government's "climate inaction".

Careme said his town of 23,000 people, which is built on land reclaimed from the sea, risked being flooded by rising ocean levels.

The town's case was backed by the cities of Paris and Grenoble, as well as several environmental NGOs including Oxfam France, Greenpeace France and L'Affaire du Siecle (The Case of the Century).

Welcoming Thursday's decision, Greenpeace and L'Affaire du Siecle called it a "historic breakthrough for the environment", noting that France's climate objectives, and its path to achieving them, had "become binding".

Macron's centrist government did not immediately react to the ruling.

In 2018, the popular climate campaigner Nicolas Hulot quit as Maron's environment minister over what he saw as the president's failure to aggressively pursue green initiatives.

- Climate justice -

The case is the latest in a series taken by climate campaigners against governments worldwide.

In a rare move for the Council of State, reflecting the global interest in the issue, it published its decision in both French and English.

The ruling comes as activists warn that the decline in emissions seen in many big economies in 2019 risked being negated by new investments in fossil fuels in countries aiming to rebound from the coronavirus pandemic.

The 2020 Climate Transparency Report, compiled by 14 think-tanks and NGOs, said that "by providing unconditional support to fossil fuels, governments recovery responses risk reversing, instead of locking in, positive pre-Covid trends."


Related Links
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation


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