Inspired by a wave of climate activism, national leaders were expected to come up with new, more ambitious plans for how to cut emissions over the next decade.
The COP26 climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, was going to be the first real test of their determination to do what they had promised to, under the landmark Paris Agreement.
The coronavirus pandemic has derailed those plans, giving some governments a new excuse to stall. But Covid-19 definitely hasn’t stopped climate change.
The pandemic has also showed the world that big, previously unthinkable changes are possible.
Despite the global upheaval, several of the world’s largest polluters did raise their long-term climate goals, putting the world within striking distance of the Paris Agreement’s goal: To reduce emissions and so limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius.
Experts are cautiously optimistic.
“There’s now a recognition that when the world’s main economies are minded to, they can intervene and correct these market failures,” said Mike Davis, CEO of Global Witness, an NGO that focuses on human rights, climate and the environment. “We’ve seen this to some extent in response to Covid, and perhaps that has begun to chip away at this myth that essentially we’re all slaves to the free market, [and] there’s nothing that we can do.”
Devastating impacts
The effects of climate change have become harder than ever to ignore in 2020.
But global warming is just one aspect of the climate crisis.
“The major impacts of climate change have been felt through drought, flooding, sea level rise, stronger tropical storms, hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones and also melting of the glaciers,” Petteri Taalas, secretary-general of the WMO, told CNN.
In the first six months of this year, nearly 10 million people were forced from their homes by disasters that were either caused or worsened by climate change, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre in Geneva (IDMC). For some the move was temporary, but many are facing long-term displacement.
India, Bangladesh and the Philippines were the three worst-impacted countries, totaling more than 6 million displacements between them.
Developing countries are often hit disproportionately hard by the impacts of climate change because of their location and the lack of access to the funds and technologies that could help mitigate the effects.
But 2020 showed that no country is immune to such disruption. Hundreds of thousands of people from some of the world’s richest countries were forced out of their homes, lost their livelihoods — and sometimes their lives — because of fires, storms and floods. An estimated 53,000 people in the US and 51,000 more in Australia were displaced in the first six months of the year alone.
And wherever such disasters happen, the poorest still suffer the most, according to Alexandra Bilak from the IDMC.
“Even in high-income countries — in California for example — there are people who didn’t have access to insurance and who did lose everything, and they’re the ones we are particularly concerned about because they’re the ones who are going to end up in very protracted situations where their vulnerabilities are going to increase,” she said.
Glimmer of hope
The effects of climate change were devastating in 2020, but they could become even more disastrous if global warming continues in line with current trends.
The WMO says there is now at least a one-in-five chance that average global temperatures will temporarily exceed pre-industrial levels by 1.5 degree Celsius by 2024 — a critical threshold in the Paris Agreement.
Under the deal, most of the world agreed to limit warming to below 2 degrees Celsius — and to aim to keep it to 1.5 degrees.
“We are already at 1.2 degrees warming and the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] says that for the welfare of mankind and also for the welfare of biosphere, the 1.5 degree target would be more favored,” Taalas said.
“With the 2 degrees target, we would see more negative impacts of climate change, it would harm global food production capacity, there would be plenty of coastal cities that would suffer from sea level rise, and we would see more category 4 and 5 hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones.”
Global greenhouse gas emissions need to fall by 45% from 2010 levels by 2030 if there’s any chance of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, and by 25% to keep it to below 2 degrees, according to the IPCC.
The good news, Taalas said, is that we have both the technological and economic means to reach those targets. The bad news? Most nations still haven’t adopted concrete plans to get there.
To reach the climate targets, emissions need to fall by at least the same amount — about 7.6% — each year over the next decade. There is a chance this could happen.
“Until recently, I guess everyone had been quite depressed about the way policies and actions were developing on climate change,” Bill Hare, CEO of Climate Analytics, told CNN.
Hare said there has been an understandable slowdown in action because of the pandemic: “It seemed that political momentum was draining away, but in the last six or eight weeks, particularly since September when President Xi Jinping of China announced China’s move towards net zero emissions before 2060, the whole mood has changed.”
South Africa, Japan, South Korea and Canada have all announced new 2050 net zero targets, following pledges by China, the EU and the UK.
According to analysis by the Climate Action Tracker, these new pledges put the world within striking distance of the Paris Agreement target. The tracker, a partnership between the NewClimate Institute and Climate Analytics, said current plans would translate into 2.1 degrees of warming by 2100.
But the new pledges are just that — promises to achieve something in three decades’ time, when most of the current governments will be long gone.
“The acid test is whether or not countries really will step up action in the near term for 2030,” Hare said.
The 2050 and 2060 targets are steps in the right direction and shouldn’t be underestimated, but what really matters is what governments do now. The next decade will be the true make-or-break moment.