World leaders seek to slow global warming

World leaders are meeting in Paris to seek a new path to slow the warming of the planet and chart action beyond 2020 by all nations.

In the waning days of what is set to be the hottest year on record, world leaders are set to meet on the outskirts of Paris for a summit that seeks to steer the global economy away from its ever-growing reliance on fossil fuels.

The UN-sponsored talks are aimed at getting 195 countries to agree on a path for cutting the greenhouse gas emissions scientists say have raised global temperatures and begun upending the earth's climate.

Opening the summit at Le Bourget on November 30, heads of government from big carbon-burning countries such as US President Barack Obama and China's Xi Jinping will seek common cause with leaders from the smallest emitters in Africa and island states.

When it concludes on December 11 - give or take a couple of days for last-minute wrangling - their negotiators are likely to claim success in committing rich and developing nations to weaning the world off the coal and oil resources that gave rise to the Industrial Revolution.

"Done right, it will shape the economy of the 21st century," said Andrew Steer, head of the World Resources Institute think-tank. Done wrong, critics warn, the consequences could be catastrophic.

A hotter planet would result in dire - if hard to perfectly predict - effects: rising seas, more intense storms and droughts on land and extinction for vast numbers of life forms in warmer, more acidic oceans.

Yet an array of other voices contend that severing the global economy from its foundations on coal, oil and gas risks unleashing pain of its own: rising energy costs that would deny the world's poor affordable power essential to improving their lives, and wound entire industries in wealthy countries.

Reconciling those forces has stumbled in past UN-backed talks. The last attempt to strike a global agreement collapsed in rancour in Copenhagen in 2009, when a few developing countries baulked at a deal they said did not go far enough in requiring industrialised nations to cut their emissions.

Aware that another failure could dissolve any remaining appetite for collective action, expectations for Paris have been kept lower.

And the mood will be sombre, amid tight security after the attacks that killed 130 people in Paris.

FROM DRAFT TO DEAL

Negotiators still have to resolve deep differences in a 51-page draft but much of the work, including new policies and regulations meant to curtail high-carbon energy use, has already been done back home.

About 170 countries have submitted plans for curbing emissions beyond 2020 - including some like Sudan or Bolivia that blocked the deal in Copenhagen.

China, reluctant to submit to any outside oversight of its carbon pledges six years ago, has promised to steer its coal-powered economy on to a greener path.

And there will be no repeat of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol that mandated specific reductions for rich nations. The agreement is unlikely to carry the force of international law, something the European Union wants dearly but the United States opposes.

Instead most nations now seem willing to commit to reviews of their policies every five years as a means of holding one another to account.

For those pushing a tough accord, the urgency has been cranked up by the latest temperature data: 2015 is on track to be the warmest since records began in the mid-19th century.

But there is optimism. Leaders of all major emitting countries have expressed support for an accord. Even Europe's major oil companies, such as BP and Royal Dutch Shell, say they favour a price on carbon.

And big shifts in energy use are under way.

The UN says investment in renewable energy has grown 500 per cent since 2004 to $270 billion in 2014, and prices have fallen sharply. Britain, home of the Industrial Revolution, now plans to phase out coal-fired power plants by 2025.

Indeed success in Paris may ride on that age-old argument of who pays: most developing countries have made their own promises contingent upon financing from the wealthier states. (Additional reporting by Sarah McFarlane in London, editing by Jonathan Leff, Bruce Wallace and David Evans)


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