Earlier this month we saw the events of the 26th United Nations Climate Change conference (COP26) unfold. Over 25,000 delegates from 200 countries attended, with the aim to negotiate climate actions and ultimately limit global warming to 1.5C. However, in keeping with previous years, the outcome of the conference (the Glasgow Climate Pact) did little more than demonstrate that we cannot rely on governments to solve the climate crisis.
The agreed-upon actions recorded in the Glasgow Climate Pact will do little to limit global temperature rise. Below is a summary of some of the key points.
The issues of the climate crisis and global warming mitigation are clearly geopolitically complicated. The world is not a level playing field. Countries differ drastically regarding finances, resources, populations, economic interests, and size, and in their vulnerability to climate change damages. Considering this, expecting all countries to come to climate change agreements inherently means there will have to be heavy compromises, which fundamentally weaken climate change responses.
Relying on international summits like COP26 and governments to solve the climate crisis is not going to work. Individuals, communities, and businesses need to act now to reduce their own impacts, and convince their governments to do the same.