Most nations fall far short in plans to curb climate change, report finds

Most nations fall far short in plans to curb climate change, report finds

Nearly every nation, including Canada, is coming up short — most of them far short — in their efforts to fight climate change, and the world is unlikely to hold warming to the internationally agreed-upon limit, according to a new scientific report.

Only one nation — tiny Gambia in Africa — is on track to cut emissions and undertake its share of actions to keep the world from exceeding the Paris agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5 C (2.7 F) of warming since pre-industrial times, the report said.

Only one industrialized nation — the United Kingdom — is even close to doing what it should to cut emissions of heat-trapping gases and finance clean energy for poorer nations, the Climate Action Tracker reported Wednesday.

Canada's actions were deemed to be "highly insufficient," along with Australia and China. 

Factoring in promises, financial pledges & policies, nearly every nation falls short _ far short for most _ on what they need to do to keep Earth from exceeding 1.5 dC since pre-industrial, @climateactiontr report says. https://t.co/yhfdipKjBB pic.twitter.com/7i7oxOySLL@borenbears

'Emissions gap' has dropped

In May, after U.S. President Joe Biden's climate summit, enough nations had promised big enough carbon pollution cuts that the tracker said the "emissions gap" — the difference between emissions projections with pledges and what's required to meet the 1.5-degree goal — dropped 11 per cent.

"That momentum has not been maintained," said report co-author Bill Hare, CEO of Climate Analytics. "We're running short of countries stepping up with additional emission commitments to close the gap."

Canada's profile on the Climate Action Tracker shows how the country does on the effect of its policies and action on emissions, its domestic target, whether it's doing its 'fair share' compared to other countries, and its commitments to paying for clean energy in developing nations. (Climate Action Tracker)

Unlike its previous reports, which just looked at promises to cut carbon pollution and policy changes, the new ratings include money issues. Finance is critical to climate negotiations this fall in Scotland, so the report examined commitments by rich nations to help pay for clean energy for poor nations, said Hare, a climate scientist.

That hurt the United States and European Union rankings.

The report called efforts by the United States, the European Union, Germany and Japan "insufficient" and more in line with global warming of 3 C (5.4 F) since the late 19th century.

The world has already warmed 1.1 C (2 F) since that time, so these countries are on track to make the world 1.9 C (3.4 F) warmer than now.

U.S. pledges almost sufficient, but not in action yet

While the U.S. official emissions pledge is almost sufficient, the overall grade "reflects that Biden hasn't got his policies in place," said Hare. The report gave U.S. financial aid commitments the worst grade possible.

China, the highest carbon emitter, and third-highest carbon polluter India are what the report calls "highly insufficient" or more in line with 4 C (7.2 F) of warming since pre-industrial times.

"We just don't see enough action coming from China," Hare said.

Hare said Brazil and Mexico "went backwards" on their fight to curb warming. The report lists Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and Thailand on the bottom.