China is responsible for more cumulative emissions than any country other than the US

Late on Thursday night in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, the Cop27 UN climate talks seemed stuck in an irretrievable logjam. Rich and poor countries had reached deadlock, a “breakdown between north and south”, according to the UN secretary general, António Guterres.

By Friday morning, the talks had been upended and the battleground dramatically redrawn, in a way it has not been in 30 years of these annual talks. At stake is the question of whether some of the world’s leading economies – countries such as China, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf petrostates, Russia and countries with high per capita income such as South Korea and Singapore – should start contributing for the first time to help the poorest and most vulnerable with the impacts of climate disaster.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Cop26: Boris Johnson ‘cautiously optimistic’ about reaching 1.5C deal

UK PM claims there has been a turnaround since G20 summit as…

‘He would have loved it’: Hairy Bikers star thanks riders for Dave Myers tribute

Si King posts message before Yorkshire motorcycling memorial in honour of late…

UK economy returns to growth amid Black Friday spending lift

GDP rises by 0.3% in November after October decline, with car leasing…