The Prague Post - UN chief calls for 'ambitious compromise' at climate talks

EUR -
AED 4.235605
AFN 76.577067
ALL 96.873396
AMD 440.630011
ANG 2.064523
AOA 1057.602839
ARS 1631.483466
AUD 1.777909
AWG 2.077435
AZN 1.958683
BAM 1.959503
BBD 2.323491
BDT 141.437265
BGN 1.956393
BHD 0.434781
BIF 3405.495583
BMD 1.153329
BND 1.5084
BOB 7.970197
BRL 6.147938
BSD 1.15358
BTN 102.295101
BWP 15.486384
BYN 3.93875
BYR 22605.255722
BZD 2.319942
CAD 1.621662
CDF 2566.157355
CHF 0.930091
CLF 0.027337
CLP 1072.434743
CNY 8.197888
CNH 8.20618
COP 4297.051513
CRC 576.932666
CUC 1.153329
CUP 30.563228
CVE 110.46224
CZK 24.178974
DJF 205.407664
DKK 7.468828
DOP 73.148224
DZD 150.557128
EGP 54.665393
ERN 17.299941
ETB 178.112235
FJD 2.636855
FKP 0.882126
GBP 0.879748
GEL 3.110819
GGP 0.882126
GHS 12.780766
GIP 0.882126
GMD 84.766588
GNF 10018.933143
GTQ 8.835815
GYD 241.331966
HKD 8.977037
HNL 30.357364
HRK 7.533317
HTG 150.86508
HUF 382.059907
IDR 19296.00775
ILS 3.746804
IMP 0.882126
INR 102.248415
IQD 1511.255724
IRR 48583.999451
ISK 146.991994
JEP 0.882126
JMD 185.280112
JOD 0.817683
JPY 181.813164
KES 149.529364
KGS 100.858883
KHR 4617.445043
KMF 492.471518
KPW 1038.001213
KRW 1693.370132
KWD 0.354441
KYD 0.9612
KZT 598.250824
LAK 25038.708872
LBP 103358.956735
LKR 355.45624
LRD 207.046109
LSL 19.886996
LTL 3.405482
LVL 0.697637
LYD 6.3133
MAD 10.717637
MDL 19.817041
MGA 5204.292734
MKD 61.636471
MMK 2421.958411
MNT 4117.831222
MOP 9.250758
MRU 45.937806
MUR 53.330488
MVR 17.772904
MWK 2000.180173
MXN 21.138746
MYR 4.793817
MZN 73.692781
NAD 19.888983
NGN 1678.359392
NIO 42.445975
NOK 11.741032
NPR 163.671961
NZD 2.0513
OMR 0.443461
PAB 1.15346
PEN 3.897977
PGK 4.879713
PHP 68.036051
PKR 325.950928
PLN 4.231888
PYG 8097.300957
QAR 4.204244
RON 5.088372
RSD 117.249772
RUB 92.481746
RWF 1677.165647
SAR 4.325566
SBD 9.492584
SCR 16.222743
SDG 693.727122
SEK 10.992821
SGD 1.507142
SHP 0.865296
SLE 26.959101
SLL 24184.738153
SOS 658.07791
SRD 44.45389
STD 23871.58947
STN 24.546384
SVC 10.093066
SYP 12754.119302
SZL 19.882588
THB 37.368445
TJS 10.658378
TMT 4.036653
TND 3.41856
TOP 2.77694
TRY 48.86643
TTD 7.82684
TWD 36.053654
TZS 2802.58988
UAH 48.713783
UGX 4198.934461
USD 1.153329
UYU 45.956842
UZS 13744.973006
VES 273.861878
VND 30420.215557
VUV 140.742875
WST 3.245146
XAF 657.158906
XAG 0.02255
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.11693
XCG 2.078921
XDR 0.816568
XOF 657.198867
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.067544
ZAR 19.786752
ZMK 10381.339579
ZMW 26.50132
ZWL 371.371588
  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    14

    -1.07%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    46.01

    -0.72%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    11.85

    -1.35%

  • CMSC

    -0.2499

    23.42

    -1.07%

  • NGG

    -0.3100

    75.78

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    88.66

    -0.37%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    35.67

    -0.78%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    68.9

    -0.77%

  • BTI

    -0.1250

    54.615

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    1.9500

    79.04

    +2.47%

  • SCS

    -0.0350

    15.695

    -0.22%

  • BCC

    0.8050

    68.025

    +1.18%

  • JRI

    -0.0250

    13.225

    -0.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.1730

    23.58

    -0.73%

  • RELX

    -0.3450

    39.455

    -0.87%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    22.95

    +0.7%

UN chief calls for 'ambitious compromise' at climate talks
UN chief calls for 'ambitious compromise' at climate talks / Photo: Pablo PORCIUNCULA - AFP

UN chief calls for 'ambitious compromise' at climate talks

With UN climate talks nearing a close in Belem, the world body's chief on Thursday urged nations to reach an "ambitious compromise" that keeps alive the goal of limiting long-term planetary warming to the critical 1.5C threshold.

Text size:

Nearly 200 countries have spent the past two weeks hashing out issues at COP30 -- from a "roadmap" to transition away from fossil fuels proposed by host Brazil, to concerns over weak emissions-reduction plans, finance for developing countries, and trade barriers.

Antonio Guterres -- the former Portuguese prime minister who has made climate his signature issue -- delivered an urgent message.

"The world is watching Belem," he told reporters during a morning news conference, as nations await a new draft negotiating text before the summit officially closes on Friday evening.

"Communities on the frontlines are watching too -- counting flooded homes, failed harvests, lost livelihoods, and asking how much more must we suffer?"

"Please engage in good faith," he urged, to reach an "ambitious compromise," adding that "1.5 degrees must be your only red line."

COP30 comes 10 years after nations agreed in Paris to limit human-caused warming to 1.5C -- and at least well below 2C -- to avert the worst impacts of climate destabilization.

Evidence now indicates the world will almost certainly overshoot the 1.5C goal, though humanity can still influence how long that overshoot lasts.

- 'Our islands could disappear' -

Guterres' plea came after Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva flew into the northern city, which sits on the edge of the Amazon, on Wednesday, in a bold bid to seal an early deal on the summit's thorniest issues.

While that effort failed, Lula, who has invested political capital into what he has called his "COP of truth," once more put his "roadmap" to move away from fossil fuels back at the top of the agenda.

The proposal is supported by a coalition of more than 80 countries but opposed by the oil-producing bloc.

Negotiators are also at odds over pressure from the developing world for developed countries to provide more financing to help vulnerable nations adapt to climate change and deploy renewable energy.

The COP29 summit in Baku last year concluded with developed nations agreeing to provide $300 billion a year in climate finance, a figure criticized by developing countries as woefully insufficient.

The EU, where many countries are facing economic headwinds and soaring debt, has led the opposition to demands for more money.

Vulnerable nations warn that failure to deliver meaningful finance that enables decisive action will have existential consequences.

"The discussions and the negotiations that we're engaging in could mean that the future of my grandchildren can be secured, or that our islands could disappear," Steven Victor, Palau's minister for agriculture, fisheries and the environment, said Thursday.

A.Slezak--TPP