Article 6H6NK Cop28 has finally named fossil fuels as the main climate problem. But do leaders have the will to act? | Adam Morton

Cop28 has finally named fossil fuels as the main climate problem. But do leaders have the will to act? | Adam Morton

by
Adam Morton
from Environment | The Guardian on (#6H6NK)

The UN summit's deal heralds the end of coal, oil and gas. The real test is whether producers back it up with action

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From the start, Cop28 appeared beyond the reach of satire. About 100,000 politicians, diplomats, lobbyists, business people, investors, activists, scientists, policy wonks and journalists from across the globe registered for a two-week climate summit hosted by an authoritarian oil state in a city, Dubai, known for skyscrapers and extravagant, energy-hungry consumerism.

The president of the summit, Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber, is the chief executive of the state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, which is planning a US$150bn oil and gas expansion. The United Arab Emirates is also investing in renewables - its Noor Energy 1 concentrated solar thermal plant is bigger than 6,000 football fields - but a more prominent sight in central Dubai is the world's biggest gas-fired power plant.

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