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Climate change
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Negotiators strike a deal at global climate talks, but questions linger over whether it measures up

  • After two weeks of negotiations almost 200 countries agreed on a framework for implementation of the Paris climate agreement

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COP24 president Michal Kurtyka jumps at the end of the final session of the COP24 summit on climate change in Katowice, southern Poland, on December 15, 2018. Photo: AFP
The Washington Post

Weary climate negotiators limped across the finish line Saturday after days of round-the-clock talks, striking a deal that keeps the world moving forward with plans to curb carbon emissions. But the agreement fell well short of the breakthrough that scientists – and many of the conference’s own participants – say is needed to avoid the cataclysmic impacts of a warming planet.

The deal struck on Saturday at a global conference in the heart of Polish coal country, where some 25,000 delegates had gathered, adds legal flesh to the bones of the 2015 Paris agreement, setting the rules of the road for how nearly 200 countries cut their production of greenhouse gases and monitor each other’s progress.

The agreement also prods countries to step up their ambition in fighting climate change, a recognition of the fact that the world’s efforts have not gone nearly far enough. But, like the landmark 2015 agreement in Paris, it does not bind countries to hit their targets. And observers questioned whether it was sufficient given the extraordinary stakes.

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(From L to R) UN climate chief Patricia Espinosa, Iran's head of delegation Majid Shafiepour Motlagh, China’s top climate negotiator Xie Zhenhua, European Union’s climate commissioner Miguel Arias Canete, COP24 president Michal Kurtyka react at the end of the final session of the COP24 summit on climate change in Katowice, southern Poland, on December 15, 2018. Photo: AFP
(From L to R) UN climate chief Patricia Espinosa, Iran's head of delegation Majid Shafiepour Motlagh, China’s top climate negotiator Xie Zhenhua, European Union’s climate commissioner Miguel Arias Canete, COP24 president Michal Kurtyka react at the end of the final session of the COP24 summit on climate change in Katowice, southern Poland, on December 15, 2018. Photo: AFP

“We are driven by our sense of humanity and commitment to the well being of the earth that sustains us and those generations that will replace us,” Michał Kurtyka, the Polish environmental official who provided over the two-week international summit, said late Saturday as the marathon talks drew to a close.

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Kurtyka noted the difficulty of finding global consensus on issues so technical and, in many ways, politically fraught. “Under thee circumstances, every single step forward is a big achievement,” he said. “And through this package, you have made 1,000 little steps forward together.”

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