Solar power’s exponential global growth, along with real money to stop methane pollution, support clean grids and storage in poor countries, and protect forests and indigenous land rights, should have marked this year’s COP30 climate meeting as a resounding success.
Instead, it has to be marked down as a failure. It didn’t do the only thing that really matters: secure global agreement on the need to end fossil fuel use, everywhere, with the utmost urgency.
The trebling of compensation for poor countries facing worsening climate change impacts is also a measure of the guilt felt by rich countries avoiding their own responsibilities to keep reducing their carbon emissions.
As the people of the lowest-lying parts of the world know already, adaptation means more powerful storms and surging tides drowning precious land. To some unfortunate valley communities it means whole towns washed away or buried under collapsing hillsides. Across south and south-east Asia it means extreme rainfall and storms bringing chaos and death.
Whatever amounts of financial help might have been floated at the Belem meeting, there is no way they can even begin to compensate for the life-changing or life-ending losses already being felt by the communities hit by these disasters.
And such money does nothing to slow the momentum of global warming as the world surges past what was once called the “safe limit” of 1.5C of warming. After centuries of relentless growth in atmospheric carbon dioxide, and with no more than five years up our sleeves to halve carbon emissions, we are now deep in an existential crisis.
Today’s weather is the consequence of things that happened many years or even decades ago – decisions not made, opportunities missed, errors that weren’t obvious at the time because of the lag in the response of climate to an ever-increasing amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Years of concerted disinformation streaming from the vested interests that mine, process and sell fossil carbon has persuaded the world to keep using it. Now, having lost its argument that burning fossil carbon doesn’t change the climate, the industry is putting vast resources, including armies of opinion-shapers, into spreading the appealing but utterly false idea of overshoot.
The overshoot argument is that exceeding temperature limits doesn’t matter because everything is reversible. It says we mustn’t get ahead of ourselves by setting ambitious targets and wasting resources on unreliable wind and solar. If nature in the form of plant photosynthesis and rock weathering isn’t enough, we are developing technology to suck carbon out of the air and store it safely and permanently.
It’s all garbage. We cannot return to what we had before this all started. The trillions of tonnes of excess carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels over centuries will remain in the air for a thousand years or more. No means natural or artificial – no offsetting of any kind – can remove anything more than a trivial percentage of this amount, let alone safely store it.
Everything in our armoury needs to be directed toward reducing dangerous concentrations of heat-trapping gases. But in the scheme of things artificial removal, or direct air capture (DAC), is essentially a diversion to distract us from the main game, which is to lower emissions.
And that – the one thing that can stop the situation getting worse – is what fossil capital fears most. A rapid and complete end to use of coal, oil and gas necessarily involves a shift in the global economic order far bigger than the industrial revolution in Britain that started it all.
It will happen. The crucial questions are how it will happen, and when.
If the world had seen the writing on the wall half a century ago, perhaps when Jimmy Carter put solar panels on the roof of the White House, we might have worked out how to make the transition with a degree of order and planning. But that’s no longer possible. Disorder and discomfort are now unavoidable.
The drive to mitigate emissions continues to threaten fossil fuels’ stranglehold on the global economy, but the industry and its financial backers are far from finished. With any number of myths and false assurances up their sleeves, they will continue to fight mitigation on any front that will help secure the industry’s future – even to the extent of dimming sunlight, a whole other topic for another time.
Belem’s failure to address the extraction and burning of gas, oil and coal only worsens our awful pickle. Exploiting remaining reserves will raise the planet’s temperature by several more degrees. That’s a place not even the most ardent fossil-fuelled traveller would want to visit.