Zürcher Nachrichten - China steps into spotlight at UN climate talks

EUR -
AED 4.299696
AFN 74.346056
ALL 95.453247
AMD 439.173161
ANG 2.095564
AOA 1074.777278
ARS 1613.916004
AUD 1.636896
AWG 2.107407
AZN 1.986527
BAM 1.955227
BBD 2.366237
BDT 144.147752
BGN 1.952984
BHD 0.441787
BIF 3493.446285
BMD 1.170782
BND 1.495349
BOB 8.117725
BRL 5.81609
BSD 1.174771
BTN 110.132722
BWP 15.795573
BYN 3.305474
BYR 22947.324487
BZD 2.362838
CAD 1.600553
CDF 2705.676811
CHF 0.918636
CLF 0.026482
CLP 1042.264874
CNY 7.990349
CNH 7.998167
COP 4181.412295
CRC 535.247699
CUC 1.170782
CUP 31.025719
CVE 110.233163
CZK 24.36157
DJF 209.201367
DKK 7.473077
DOP 70.699883
DZD 155.134135
EGP 60.891549
ERN 17.561728
ETB 184.925881
FJD 2.596682
FKP 0.867002
GBP 0.867625
GEL 3.149707
GGP 0.867002
GHS 13.005244
GIP 0.867002
GMD 85.466851
GNF 10311.066053
GTQ 8.979407
GYD 245.809007
HKD 9.169675
HNL 31.212119
HRK 7.537259
HTG 153.783615
HUF 365.026051
IDR 20249.843078
ILS 3.522924
IMP 0.867002
INR 110.150082
IQD 1538.955528
IRR 1544846.666305
ISK 143.795229
JEP 0.867002
JMD 186.107044
JOD 0.830035
JPY 186.891964
KES 151.278166
KGS 102.358414
KHR 4702.581578
KMF 492.899374
KPW 1053.645159
KRW 1733.19037
KWD 0.360624
KYD 0.979017
KZT 544.372777
LAK 25919.514076
LBP 105205.213829
LKR 373.312182
LRD 216.166645
LSL 19.311822
LTL 3.457014
LVL 0.708194
LYD 7.428918
MAD 10.84776
MDL 20.12436
MGA 4872.613529
MKD 61.652739
MMK 2458.362125
MNT 4190.341797
MOP 9.477063
MRU 46.898655
MUR 54.722532
MVR 18.088881
MWK 2036.720464
MXN 20.316343
MYR 4.643319
MZN 74.824752
NAD 19.311822
NGN 1581.761356
NIO 43.237328
NOK 10.87486
NPR 176.213859
NZD 1.988263
OMR 0.450163
PAB 1.174866
PEN 4.037282
PGK 5.167816
PHP 70.749763
PKR 327.510608
PLN 4.244447
PYG 7389.928803
QAR 4.283263
RON 5.09278
RSD 117.35099
RUB 87.920487
RWF 1716.711521
SAR 4.391138
SBD 9.422915
SCR 16.053877
SDG 703.014901
SEK 10.793514
SGD 1.494041
SHP 0.874107
SLE 28.859864
SLL 24550.705757
SOS 671.408955
SRD 43.855121
STD 24232.820735
STN 24.49439
SVC 10.280031
SYP 129.526455
SZL 19.304589
THB 37.906393
TJS 11.060758
TMT 4.10359
TND 3.416013
TOP 2.818962
TRY 52.597767
TTD 7.9647
TWD 36.941098
TZS 3044.033436
UAH 51.545433
UGX 4352.742866
USD 1.170782
UYU 46.706311
UZS 14248.823885
VES 564.498504
VND 30823.75946
VUV 138.190282
WST 3.190848
XAF 655.770405
XAG 0.015377
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.164097
XCG 2.117288
XDR 0.815568
XOF 655.773205
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.406719
ZAR 19.33236
ZMK 10538.438884
ZMW 22.350736
ZWL 376.991282
  • BTI

    0.7500

    56.92

    +1.32%

  • RIO

    -0.1900

    100.09

    -0.19%

  • NGG

    1.2600

    86.86

    +1.45%

  • GSK

    0.3650

    56.065

    +0.65%

  • BCE

    -0.0150

    23.715

    -0.06%

  • BP

    -0.2500

    46.12

    -0.54%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    36.1

    -0.47%

  • RYCEF

    0.3900

    15.49

    +2.52%

  • CMSD

    0.1350

    23.265

    +0.58%

  • JRI

    -0.0350

    12.965

    -0.27%

  • AZN

    0.8650

    195.675

    +0.44%

  • BCC

    1.5200

    83.76

    +1.81%

  • CMSC

    0.0620

    22.892

    +0.27%

  • VOD

    0.3050

    15.615

    +1.95%

  • RBGPF

    -4.0600

    64.94

    -6.25%

China steps into spotlight at UN climate talks
China steps into spotlight at UN climate talks / Photo: STRINGER - AFP/File

China steps into spotlight at UN climate talks

China's emissions-cutting pledge is poised to take center stage at a United Nations climate meeting Wednesday, after US President Donald Trump unleashed a blistering -- if predictable -- broadside against the science surrounding planet-warming fossil fuels.

Text size:

Some 118 nations will outline plans to curb global warming, which is driving disasters worldwide -- from catastrophic floods in Pakistan to raging wildfires in Spain -- even as many continue expanding oil and gas operations.

Chinese Premier Li Qiang will open the gathering at UN headquarters in New York.

His country -- responsible for about 30 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions from its factories, power plants, vehicles and more -- is expected to deliver a crucial update: its 2035 emissions-cutting target.

China has never committed to reducing carbon dioxide outright. Instead, it pledged to peak emissions before 2030 -- a goal it appears set to meet five years early thanks to rapid growth in solar energy and electric cars.

Most wealthy nations, historically the biggest contributors to warming, peaked decades ago but still lack credible plans to reach carbon neutrality by 2050.

"All eyes will be on China," Li Shuo, an expert at the Asia Society think tank who is well-connected in Beijing, told AFP.

- Under promise, over deliver -

He expects a "single digit to low double digit" percentage reduction commitment over the next decade, similar to the pace the United States and European Union achieved in the ten years after their own peaks.

That trajectory would fall well short of what is needed to limit warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels -- the target set by the 2015 Paris Agreement to avoid the worst climate catastrophes.

Still, presenting a target ahead of COP30, the year's main climate gathering in Belem, Brazil, will signal China's commitment to the international process even as the US under Trump champions fossil fuels and the EU struggles to unite around its plan.

In any case, Li Shuo warns, focusing too much on the figure risks obscuring the fact that "China has already become the green tech superpower of the world" and is widely expected to under-promise but over-deliver.

For this UN summit, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres invited only countries ready to present or announce a new 2035 climate goal.

Under the Paris accord -- which nearly every country is part of, except Iran, Libya, and soon, the United States -- nations freely set their own targets but must strengthen them every five years.

Most are behind schedule, notably the European Union, where several states fear moving too fast could hurt industry.

France, for example, faces shaky finances and political turmoil, and wants more clarity on investment frameworks before committing to deeper decarbonization.

"There's a current shortfall in ambition demonstrated by the countries that we traditionally look to for leadership (which) are acting more like climate laggards," said Ilana Seid, ambassador to the UN for Palau and chair of the Alliance of Small Island States.

- Catastrophism v hope -

The UN is trying to strike a balance between warning of catastrophe and maintaining hope.

On one hand, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told AFP last week that chances of limiting warming to 1.5C are on the verge of "collapsing," a view echoed by climatologists, with current temperatures already about 1.4C above pre-industrial levels.

On the other, UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell insists the Paris process is working.

"Without UN climate cooperation, we were heading for five degrees of heating -- an impossible future," he told a gathering at the annual Climate Week in New York earlier this week. "Today we are closer to three. Still too high -- but bending the curve."

Part of that progress stems from China. A decade ago, three-quarters of its electric mix came from coal -- a figure now down to half. Its booming exports of solar panels, batteries, and electric cars are cutting emissions abroad as well.

M.J.Baumann--NZN