cop El mundo verá a Colombia por una razón positiva, la COP será ventana de biodiversidad:Eder By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Sep 2024 12:47:00 +0000 En 6AM habló Alejandro Eder, alcalde de Cali, sobre la importancia que ha de tener el evento COP16 y como este se ha convertido en el más importante del mundo, para la protección de la biodiversidad y del medio ambiente Full Article
cop Superintendencia alerta por incremento de precios y anomalías en hoteles de Cali para COP By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2024 14:32:00 +0000 En Caracol Radio estuvo Cielo Rusinque, superintendente de Industria y Comercio, explicando las medidas de la entidad. Full Article
cop Seguridad de la COP16 está preparada, hay que reforzar Jamundí: Gobernadora del Valle By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Oct 2024 14:47:00 +0000 Dilian Francisca Toro estuvo en 6AM para hablar sobre la preparación del Valle para el inicio de este evento. Full Article
cop Así fue como el sistema antidron de Indra protegió los cielos de la COP16 en Colombia By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 14:25:00 +0000 En 6 AM de Caracol Radio estuvo José Fernando Quintero, Director general de Indra para Colombia, Ecuador, Centroamérica y El Caribe, quien habló sobre cómo fue el sistema con el que garantizaron la seguridad en la COP16. Full Article
cop Copland By www.npr.org Published On :: Sun, 14 Jan 2007 09:00:00 -0500 Small-town America is the setting for Aaron Copland's music for = the score to the film version of Thornton Wilder's Our Town. = The Cleveland Orchestra, conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas, is in = Severance Hall for this performance of the Suite from Our Town. Full Article
cop Corporations at COP27, Tweeting as Elon Musk, the labour movement takes a stand, Margaret Sullivan and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 11 Nov 2022 18:10:11 EST Corporate influence at COP27; cartoonist Jeph Jacques gets booted from Twitter for impersonating Elon Musk; Margaret Sullivan on how to cover Trump and Trumpism; what Ontario unions' victory over Bill 28 means for Canada's labour movement; graphic novelist Cecil Castellucci hopes Shifting Earth will be a path toward climate action; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
cop Development bank financing pledge gives COP29 summit early boost By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:44:35Z Full Article
cop Child grooming warning flyers ‘false’ say cops By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Tue, 28 Jun 2016 07:25:00 GMT POLICE have warned the community not to take the law into their own hands after a flyer found in toilets made claims of child grooming in Bronte. Full Article
cop Cyber Top Cops Is Back! By cybertopcops.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 05 Apr 2010 20:15:10 GMT We would like to announce that we are back on track. And we kick off with a review of Kaspersky Internet Security. Full Article
cop Cops Who Let Dog Bite Black Man Under FBI Investigation By www.bet.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Sep 2021 14:05:39 EDT Video of the shocking incident went viral. Full Article National News
cop Cops Ignored Pleas Of Black Paraplegic Man In Brutal Stop By www.bet.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Oct 2021 13:49:43 EDT Clifford Owensby told Dayton Police he’s paraplegic. Full Article Police Brutality National News
cop Grand Jury Eyes Ex-Cop Accused Of ‘Terrorizing’ Black People By www.bet.com Published On :: Sun, 17 Oct 2021 11:56:21 EDT The ex-captain allegedly targeted Black people for decades. Full Article Police Kansas corruption National News
cop Shocking Video: Cop Slams Black Woman To Pavement By www.bet.com Published On :: Mon, 18 Oct 2021 08:00:10 EDT An internal investigation is underway. Full Article National News
cop Marleigh Howes Helps Bolles Defeat Episcopal By bernews.com Published On :: Sat, 21 Sep 2024 23:00:21 +0000 The Bolles School girls swimming team, featuring Marleigh Howes, secured a decisive victory against Episcopal with a final score of 234-70. Howes played a key role in the win, anchoring the Bolles girls 200 yard freestyle relay A team to a first-place finish with a time of 1:40.41. She also contributed to the Bolles girls […] Full Article All Sports #Swimming
cop Kaleidoscope Arts Surpasses Fundraising Goal By bernews.com Published On :: Tue, 13 Aug 2024 20:20:15 +0000 Kaleidoscope Arts Foundation surpassed its $135,000 fundraising goal, raising $139,964 thanks to community support. A spokesperson said, “Kaleidoscope Arts Foundation, which has been empowering children through art since 2006, announced in June that they needed to fundraise $135,000 within three months in order to meet its needs and stay sustainable. Today, they are excited and […] Full Article All News #Artists #CharityEvents #GoodNews
cop Kaleidoscope To Host Workshops For Art Month By bernews.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Oct 2024 12:51:28 +0000 Kaleidoscope Arts Foundation is celebrating Bermuda Art Month this October with ten workshops for all ages, encouraging community engagement with local artists at their Jubilee Road location. A spokesperson said, “Kaleidoscope Arts Foundation is joining the collective community of artist’s to celebrate Art Month this October. “Bermuda Art Month is a great opportunity for the […] Full Article All Entertainment #Artists #GoodNews
cop Cop 29: Leaders to address summit after report finds climate pledges not kept – live updates - The Guardian By news.google.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 06:03:00 GMT Cop 29: Leaders to address summit after report finds climate pledges not kept – live updates The GuardianLive Briefing: Greta Thunberg calls site of COP29 climate summit ‘beyond absurd’ The Washington PostCOP29 gets underway in Azerbaijan ABC NewsOil and gas are ‘a gift of God’: COP29 leader The Australian Financial Review Full Article
cop The Tianlin Space Telescope By www.planetary.org Published On :: Thu, 05 Sep 2024 07:00:00 -0700 China is in the early stages of planning a huge space observatory to help answer the matter of whether we are alone in the galaxy. Full Article
cop COP29 host Azerbaijan hits out at West in defence of oil and gas By biztoc.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 06:40:21 GMT President Ilham Aliyev described his country as a victim of a "well-orchestrated campaign of slander and blackmail". Full Article
cop US Climate Official Tells COP29 Oil Boom Aids Energy Transition By biztoc.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 06:51:20 GMT Full Article
cop Trolling Cop WIN By cheezburger.com Published On :: Fri, 07 Dec 2012 16:02:00 -0800 Full Article freeway cars troll cop Video g rated win
cop SteelFox and Rhadamanthys Malware Use Copyright Scams, Driver Exploits to Target Victims By thehackernews.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 15:12:00 +0530 An ongoing phishing campaign is employing copyright infringement-related themes to trick victims into downloading a newer version of the Rhadamanthys information stealer since July 2024. Cybersecurity firm Check Point is tracking the large-scale campaign under the name CopyRh(ight)adamantys. Targeted regions include the United States, Europe, East Asia, and South America. "The campaign Full Article
cop Nobody wants Copilot Pro AI for Office365, so Microsoft will force-bundle it and raise the price? By catless.ncl.ac.uk Published On :: Full Article
cop Soviet Helicopters By englishrussia.com Published On :: Tue, 26 Apr 2022 14:19:59 +0000 The post Soviet Helicopters appeared first on English Russia. Full Article History Photos Technology helicopters soviet ussr
cop Buckyballs in space: Weichman combines astrochemistry and spectroscopy to identify complex space molecules By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Mon, 22 Apr 2024 15:45:31 -0400 Princeton chemists are expanding our understanding of the universe by identifying complex molecules in interstellar space. Full Article
cop Chemist Victor Laurie, who contributed to the field of microwave spectroscopy, dies at 88 By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 27 Oct 2023 10:27:00 -0400 Laurie joined the Princeton faculty in 1966 and transferred to emeritus status in 2000. Full Article
cop The best boutique hotels in Copenhagen By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 27 Aug 2024 16:30:00 GMT Full Article structure:better-life/better-life-evergreen topics:places/europe structure:eg-general structure:travel/hotels structure:hotel-guides structure:better-life/better-life-guide storytype:standard travel-entity:article structure:travel topics:places/denmark structure:us-content structure:travel/top-10-hotels topics:places/copenhagen
cop 10 spectacular Hubble Space Telescope images By www.pbs.org Published On :: Wed, 24 Nov 2021 17:00:00 +0000 With the upcoming launch of the James Webb Space Telescope, the Hubble era is gradually drawing to a close. Here are some highlights from the countless wonders Hubble has shown us during its 31 years in space. Full Article
cop The James Webb Space Telescope team prepares for launch By www.pbs.org Published On :: Wed, 22 Dec 2021 13:42:00 +0000 Here’s what the largest—and most expensive—infrared space telescope will set its sights on. Full Article
cop Dazzling first images from James Webb Space Telescope By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Jul 2022 17:11:00 +0000 Images of five targets include the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant universe to date. Full Article
cop ‘Red Flower’ copes with the carnage in Sderot By www.jpost.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Oct 2024 00:48:35 GMT Also available is the docudrama One Day in October on Yes TV, by Daniel Finkelman and Oded Davidoff, which offers dramatized versions of four stories from October 7. Full Article Sderot film review The October 7 Massacre Nova music festival
cop A pergunta de trilhões de dólares no centro da COP29 By www.bbc.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:29:11 GMT A cúpula climática da ONU deste ano em Baku, Azerbaijão, está sendo chamada de 'uma COP de financiamento climático'. Mas quanto dinheiro será prometido? Full Article
cop Copy of Online gaming company has business ties to Iran By shark-tank.com Published On :: Tue, 18 Feb 2020 05:09:37 +0000 Lottery giant Scientific Games Digital has filed a protest against an online gaming permit application submitted by SBTech because the company doesn't list specific list which countries it does business with. The post Copy of Online gaming company has business ties to Iran appeared first on Shark Tank. Full Article Featured Hispolitica iran
cop COP29 chief exec filmed promoting fossil fuel deals By www.bbc.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 06:06:28 GMT Undercover filming shows COP29 chief exec discussing new oil and gas projects ahead of climate summit. Full Article
cop News24 | US climate action won't end with Trump, envoy tells COP29 By www.news24.com Published On :: Monday Nov 11 2024 19:00:27 Washington's top climate envoy sought to reassure countries at the CO29 talks Monday that Donald Trump's re-election would not end US efforts to tackle global warming. Full Article
cop News24 | EXPLAINER | COP29: What is a carbon credit? What is Article 6? By www.news24.com Published On :: Tuesday Nov 12 2024 06:21:50 Countries at the UN COP29 climate summit in Azerbaijan will attempt to agree to rules for a global system for trading carbon offset credits. Full Article
cop News24 | COP29 host Azerbaijan brands oil and gas 'gift from God' By www.news24.com Published On :: Tuesday Nov 12 2024 18:00:36 President Aliyev accuses West of hypocrisy for criticising country’s fossil-fuel dependence while buying its oil & gas. Full Article
cop News24 | COP29: Pay up or face climate-led disaster for humanity, warns UN chief By www.news24.com Published On :: Tuesday Nov 12 2024 19:30:14 United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told world leaders at the COP29 summit on Tuesday to "pay up" to prevent climate-led humanitarian disasters, and said time was running out to limit a destructive rise in global tempera Full Article
cop News24 | WATCH | KZN cops to conduct probe after police assault video goes viral By www.news24.com Published On :: Wednesday Nov 13 2024 08:51:38 KwaZulu-Natal police commissioner Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi has ordered an "immediate investigation" after a video went viral on social media of a police officer slapping and pulling around a man. Full Article
cop The Poopcopter is a DIY autonomous drone that finds and collects dog-doo By boingboing.net Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 22:27:31 +0000 A Minnessota maker named Caleb Olson built the Poopcopter, an autonomous drone that seeks out dog-doo and retrieves it for disposal. He describes it as the "world's first aerial bound self-guided dog poop removal system." See it in action below. "The Poopcopter is capable of scanning areas defined by a user, your backyard for example, and as it scans it's performing real-time computer vision using the camera which is inside the drone," Olson says. — Read the rest The post The Poopcopter is a DIY autonomous drone that finds and collects dog-doo appeared first on Boing Boing. Full Article Post animals dogs DRONES
cop The science of vinegar: what happens to bacteria under a microscope By boingboing.net Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 11:15:00 +0000 I recently switched over to using a vinegar-based spray cleaner (just vinegar, water, and rubbing alcohol), to clean my kitchen. It works wonderfully for me, and I love that by using it I'm saving money and reducing my exposure to harsh chemicals. — Read the rest The post The science of vinegar: what happens to bacteria under a microscope appeared first on Boing Boing. Full Article Post bacteria microscope vinegar
cop AI artist appeals denial of copyright protection By boingboing.net Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 16:09:58 +0000 Jason M. Allen's "Theatre D'Opera Spatial" won an art competition at the 2022 Colorado State Fair, but the work was subsequently denied copyright protection due to his use of AI software to generate it and his unwillingness to disclaim that contribution to the whole. — Read the rest The post AI artist appeals denial of copyright protection appeared first on Boing Boing. Full Article Post ai art copyright slop slopcore aesthetic
cop Video: John Roderick on String Art Owls, Copper Pipe, and Bono's Boss By www.43folders.com Published On :: Fri, 21 Jan 2011 18:51:26 +0000 [jump to video] Long story (not very) short? One night in 2003--after killing it in front of audience of about 30 lucky people in Oakland--The Long Winters needed a place to crash, and my wife and I were happy to oblige. So, they drove their Big Stinky Blue Van over the bridge, slept on our floor, and by breakfast the next morning, it'd become clear to me that I'd provided lodging to a man who was not only very likely a member of my karass--he was also one of the smartest bullshit artists I'd ever met. Almost eight years later, although I don't see him nearly as much as I'd like, I still count the guy as one of my best pals ever. That's John Roderick. And, I think you need to know about him. John doesn't read this site--he's more of a Twitter person--so I don't risk feeding his astounding excess of dignity by saying he's one of the most gifted writers and bon vivants of our generation. He's just the best. In large part because he's congenitally incapable of suffering bullshit. This was never more apparent than the Saturday morning in 2007 when we sat in my back yard and talked about a lot of stuff. Playing guitar, advertising on the web, the evil work of promoters, and why everyone is always trying to shortchange everyone on copper pipe. That talking became a four-part interview I ran on the late and occasionally lamented The Merlin Show, and, to this day, it's one of my favorite things I've been lucky enough to post to the web. So, y'know how I'm definitely "not for everyone?" Well, John is really "not for everyone." He's opinionated and arrogant and undiplomatic and unironically loves Judas Priest--meaning everyone will find at least one thing not to like about him. Despite being hairy and enjoying laying on your bed, John is not exactly a teddy bear. But, John's also right a lot. And, he never sands off the edges of his personality or opinions to make you theoretically "like" him. Which, it will come as no surprise to you, is a big reason I love the guy more than a free prime rib dinner. So, why the jizzfest about that awful jerk, John Roderick? Because, as I noted the other day on the Twitter, in our first episode of Back to Work I misattributed a line that should have been credited to John. Which in itself is unimportant, except inasmuch as finding that link to correct the error got me watching our 50-some minutes of chatting again. I also received some at-responses and emails that reminded me how much people enjoyed our chat. But, really it made me realize how much that rambling morning in my back yard still resonates so much with stuff I care a lot about. Independence. Agency. Directness. And, never apologizing for wanting to get paid. Also, guitars and talkative hippies. So, anyway. John. I edited all four parts of the video into one big (streamable/downloadable) movie that should make it way easier to watch at a sitting. Should that interest you. Which it may not. Which, as ever, is totally fine, and kind of the point. But. If you like Dan and my new show (and, seriously—God bless you magnificent bastards who helped briefly make B2W the most popular podcast in the world [gulp]), I think you'll really like this interview a lot too. I hope so, anyway. Thus, submitted for your disapproval, permit me to present my four-year-old visit with the acerbic, opinionated, and reportedly unlikeable bullshit artist whom I respect and adore more than just about anybody. Meet Hotrod. Vimeo Page Direct Download Link (589 mb, requires login) ”Video: John Roderick on String Art Owls, Copper Pipe, and Bono's Boss” was written by Merlin Mann for 43Folders.com and was originally posted on January 21, 2011. Except as noted, it's ©2010 Merlin Mann and licensed for reuse under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0. "Why a footer?" Full Article Brady's Bits John Roderick The Merlin Show video
cop What are MENA countries’ priorities for climate action and COP? By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 02 Oct 2024 08:47:13 +0000 What are MENA countries’ priorities for climate action and COP? 24 October 2024 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 2 October 2024 Online Experts discuss the impacts of COP27 and 28 on the region and priorities for COP29. In November this year, all eyes will be on Azerbaijan as Baku hosts the 29th UN Climate Conference (COP). Hosting COP offers an opportunity to push for climate action that reflects the host country’s unique circumstances, as well as regional interests. COP28 in the United Arab Emirates and COP27 in Egypt highlighted the climate priorities for the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), one of the world’s most vulnerable regions to the impacts of climate change.From rising temperatures and deadly heatwaves, to extreme weather events such as heavy rainstorms, sandstorms, and cyclones, climate change exacerbates existing vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities include water scarcity, food security, and the preservation of livelihoods increasingly threatening the region’s social and economic stability.While there has been some progress in advancing formal negotiations on key issues, the gap between COP agreements and tangible actions to address the increasingly severe effects of climate change in the MENA region remains vast. This webinar aims to assess:What are the key tangible impacts of COP27 and COP28 in Egypt and the UAE respectively on driving climate action in the region?How do MENA countries balance COP28’s landmark agreement to transition away from fossil fuels with their unique national circumstances?How will the region benefit from COP28 breakthrough in integrating the issues of climate, peace and security in climate action through the ‘Declaration of Climate, Relief, Recovery and Peace’?What are the priorities for COP29 and how do they align with the climate agenda in the MENA region? Full Article
cop A "Proteomic Ruler" for Protein Copy Number and Concentration Estimation without Spike-in Standards By www.mcponline.org Published On :: 2014-12-01 Jacek R. WiśniewskiDec 1, 2014; 13:3497-3506Research Full Article
cop G20's lack of progress highlights challenge for COP26 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Mon, 01 Nov 2021 11:34:03 +0000 G20's lack of progress highlights challenge for COP26 Expert comment NCapeling 1 November 2021 A positive outcome from the G20 summit was committing to end international financing for coal projects but, on other issues, the communique was ultimately weak. Success at Glasgow depends on bridging fault lines Renata Dwan The G20 summit’s lack of progress on climate highlights the scale of the challenge – and the stakes – for COP26. The countries responsible for 80 per cent of global emissions recognized but failed to agree concrete action to limit global warming to 1.5C. The leaders’ gathering reveals multilateralism’s fault lines. One is the tension between domestic politics and international priorities, reflected in the lack of ambition to reduce coal dependency. The second is the tension between industrialized and developing states over responsibility for delivering global goods. The G20 failed to endorse the G7’s pledge to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 or to accelerate the mobilization of previously agreed climate financing. Success at Glasgow – and beyond – will depend on the extent to which these fault lines can be bridged. Communique’s language was weak Professor Tim Benton A positive outcome on climate from the G20 summit was the commitment to end international financing for coal projects by the end of 2021. This is a win for the climate and for the G20-host, Italy. The G20 might seem disappointing to some, but a lot will depend on expectations The references to 1.5 degrees and the commitment to taking further action this decade were also important, and help lay the groundwork for COP26. On the downside, the communique’s language on phasing out fossil fuel subsidies and coal domestically was very weak. The G20 summit should be regarded as the next step – it is crucial world leaders accelerate their efforts at COP26 in Glasgow to avert climate catastrophe and keep 1.5 degrees alive. Platitudes and vague plans on pandemic preparedness Robert Yates As G20 leaders head to Glasgow to tackle the evolving climate crisis, they leave Rome having failed, yet again, to take serious action to end the ongoing COVID-19 crisis. Despite the obvious urgency to achieve universal vaccine coverage, their communique contains little more than platitudes and vague plans to prepare better for future pandemics. It is not as if they had not been briefed. This year’s G20 leaders’ summit marks a stark contrast with the past four years when much of the group’s energy was exhausted simply trying to maintain a consensus In the run up to the G20, the leaders of the WHO, WTO, IMF, World Bank, former world leaders, Nobel laureates and the Pope, all highlighted the costs of ongoing vaccine inequity: five million deaths next year and $5.3 trillion dollars in lost economic output by 2026. The ask was also straightforward: launch a massive airlift of unneeded vaccines from rich countries through COVAX, ramp up financing of the multilateral response and accelerate technology transfers to developing countries. But on all these issues the wording of the communique is weak, with no numbers on vaccines or funding, no hard timescales and no urgency. This does not augur well for the COP-26 summit. G20 communique is a launching pad Dr Leslie Vinjamuri The G20 might seem disappointing to some, but a lot will depend on expectations. If your starting point is a pandemic that has so far taken five million lives and driven a global economic crisis, and that both these crises are marked by deep inequality, then the measures adopted are bound to look insufficient. But if your starting point is 16 years of democracy in decline, rampant disinformation on issues of climate and public health, four years of failed international leadership during the Donald Trump presidency and, especially today, heightened tensions between the US and China, the world’s two greatest powers, then the fact that the G20 communique achieved as much as it has is remarkable. Any written document that requires agreement between the US, UK, China, Russia, India, Saudi Arabia and the EU is necessarily going to be watered down. But the principles are in the document, and mostly everyone turned up – if some by video. That is a good outcome for this kind of multilateralism in 2021. The G20 communique is a floor not a ceiling, and it’s a launching pad for activism and mobilisation by individual states, but also by corporates, civil society, and subnational actors. Now we need to hope that those on the right side of progress, whether on climate, health, or development, will use this language to drive forward concrete actions towards net zero, climate finance, vaccine distribution, and debt relief. Specifics are for the most part missing Creon Butler This year’s G20 leaders’ summit marks a stark contrast with the past four years when much of the group’s energy was exhausted simply trying to maintain a consensus – in the face of opposition by a President Trump-led United States – on such issues as the importance of tackling climate change, the benefits of the rules-based multilateral trade system and the centrality of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the global financial safety net. By contrast, today’s G20 Rome Leaders’ declaration early on underlines ‘the crucial role of multilateralism in finding shared, effective solutions’. In two critical areas for the world economy – the global boost to liquidity from the general allocation of $650bn in Special Drawing Rights and the global tax deal focused on addressing challenges arising from digitalisation – this outlook has been translated into very substantial and concrete achievements announced earlier in the year. Full Article
cop Independent Thinking: Rishi Sunak and the UK, John Kerry on COP27 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 28 Oct 2022 08:47:31 +0000 Independent Thinking: Rishi Sunak and the UK, John Kerry on COP27 Audio NCapeling 28 October 2022 The second episode of our new podcast examines the changes in the UK government as Rishi Sunak become prime minister and looks ahead to COP27 with John Kerry. Bronwen Maddox and her guests discuss the arrival in Number 10 of Rishi Sunak, the UK’s youngest prime minister of modern times as well as its third of 2022, alongside analysing the Chatham House event with US Special Presidential Envoy on Climate John Kerry. Bronwen’s guests from Chatham House are John Kampfner, executive director of the UK in the World Initiative, Hans Kundani, associate fellow with the Europe programme, and Anna Åberg, research associate with the Environment and Society programme. They are joined by Sir Simon Fraser, formerly of the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and Chatham House’s deputy chairman. Independent Thinking is a regular podcast hosted by Chatham House director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts to provide insight on the latest international issues. Full Article
cop Independent Thinking: US midterms surprise, COP27 begins By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Nov 2022 11:11:29 +0000 Independent Thinking: US midterms surprise, COP27 begins Audio NCapeling 11 November 2022 The fourth episode of our new podcast analyses early results from the US midterm elections and brings the latest insights from a crucial COP27. The US midterm elections threw up some surprising results with the anticipated Republican ‘red wave’ failing to materialize. Meanwhile at COP27 in Egypt, world leaders met in the first week of the summit. What did their presence achieve? To find out, returning to the podcast this week with Bronwen Maddox are Leslie Vinjamuri, director of the Chatham House US and Americas programme who was in Atlanta Georgia for the midterms, and Anna Aberg, research associate in the Environment and Society programme who is on the ground at COP27. Joining them are Peter Trubowitz, professor of international relations and director of the Phelan US Centre at the London School of Economics and Antony Froggart, deputy director and senior research fellow in the Environment and Society programme. Full Article
cop COP27: What was achieved, and what needs to happen now By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Sun, 20 Nov 2022 15:12:54 +0000 COP27: What was achieved, and what needs to happen now Expert comment NCapeling 20 November 2022 Chatham House environment experts give their initial reaction to the end of COP27, examining how much progress was achieved, and the key issues still to be worked on. Loss and Damage fund is a historic moment Anna Aberg COP27 will go down in history as the UN climate change conference where the Loss and Damage fund was agreed. After decades of pushing, this is a momentous victory for climate-vulnerable developing countries. The shift in the conversation – and in the positions of developed countries – since COP26 is remarkable. It is critical parties continue to build on the positive momentum created in Sharm as challenging discussions on how the new loss and damage fund will work – and who will contribute to it financially – ensue. Tim Benton Overall COP27 was a hectic, sometimes chaotic, event. The COP advanced some matters but on others failed to drive ambition towards the sort of climate action required to keep alive the possibility of restricting climate change within the envelope of the Paris agreement. Loss and Damage progressed but, especially in week two, the risk was of going backwards in this COP relative to COP26 in Glasgow. The final cover declaration managed to avoid the worst, but also avoided the best. Overall COP27 was a hectic, sometimes chaotic, event that advanced some matters but left others trailing behind where they need to be Notably disappointing was that, although food systems were much in debate unlike in previous COPs, there was still significant political resistance to fully adopting a systems approach. Globally, food systems emit about one-third of all greenhouse gasses, while poor diets – in rich and poor countries alike – are arguably the single biggest factor in ill-health and early death. COP27 maintained a firm focus on supply-side solutions to tackle food insecurity, avoiding the politically more contentious demand-side issues of ensuring nutritious and sustainable diets for all. Start of implementation phase demands renewed urgency Bernice Lee It has often been said climate action is moving from target-setting into the implementation phase. What COP27 shows is that, as the implementation phase begins, integrity and accountability will be ever more critical, as the voices of the vulnerable economies and the youth remind the world time and time again. This compromised outcome is also a reminder that the delivery of climate action begins at home, as does the bread-and-butter politics of money and influence. It is significant the link between fossil energy and climate impacts has now been openly made in the international arena, regardless of whether it appeared in the final cover agreement. As the dust settles, there will be many questions and reflection over tactics chosen by different parties and actors, and much to be learned that can help those pushing for more breakthrough moments at COP28. Antony Froggatt There was insufficient progress on the energy transition both in and around COP27. Few countries followed through on their promises to increase the ambition of their nationally determined contributions (NDCs), although Australia and the European Union (EU) were rare exceptions among the developed countries. Higher fossil fuel prices, due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, can and should have resulted in an accelerated energy transition. Yet the language in the final decision around carbon reductions and energy at best repeats the language of COP26 and does not reflect the renewed urgency of the situation, stemming from accelerating climate impacts and the weaponization of fossil fuels in Russia’s conflict. At COP28, parties to the UNFCCC will finalize a Global Stock Take which will include a review of national progress in meeting carbon abatement targets. This will be a key moment and unfortunately is likely to highlight once again how much faster the world needs to reduce its dependency on fossil fuels. Fossil fuel discussions show failure of imagination Glada Lahn Overshadowed by the pain of developing country fuel importers and European attempts to replace Russian gas, discussion of fossil fuels was fraught. The text, which called for accelerating the ‘phasedown of unabated coal’ use for the first time only last year, failed to expand to include oil and gas, despite calls to do so from India, the US, EU, and UK. Gas use also appeared to gain a pass via the inclusion of ‘low emission’ energy alongside renewables. Given that extracting and burning oil and gas accounts for 40 per cent of all annual greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs), and leaders agree on the need for ‘deep, rapid and sustained’ emission cuts, that language is beyond logical argument. However, current dependencies, fears of stranded investments, and a failure of imagination won out. Stronger than usual oil and gas industry presence led to a higher number of meetings focused on decarbonization of the sector. Major producer countries such as Canada and Saudi Arabia were keen to emphasize technologies to ‘clean up’ rather than phase down their fuels as the future. Not all developing country governments with hydrocarbon reserves see the ‘phase down’ text in conflict with their economic interests Not all developing country governments with hydrocarbon reserves see the ‘phase down’ text as conflicting with their economic interests. Large oil and gas exporter Colombia supported the inclusion of ‘all fossil fuels’ and Kenya, a country which had been pursuing oil and coal prospects, became a friend of the high ambition Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance which seeks a ‘managed phase out of oil and gas supply’. A vocal contingent of African civil society meanwhile railed against health and ecology-damaging oil and gas projects and investments that would lock them into a high emissions future. With stronger resolve to reorient finance towards net zero both in Sharm el-Sheikh and at the concurrent G20 summit in Bali, the practicalities of economic adaptation to the shift out of fossil fuels – including just transition for workers – rose up the agenda. These issues will overtake the wrangle over wording in the run up to COP28. Adaptation must now move to the forefront Ruth Townend There are three pillars of climate action: mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage. This year progress was made on mitigation and loss and damage but, to avoid wild spiralling of the latter, adaptation must have its day in the sun in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) at COP28 next year. Adaptation lacks a concrete goal, akin to the 1.5 degree limit, and few countries have set out plans to adapt to climate change. Momentum will come when the promised ‘global goal on adaptation’ (GGA) is finally defined, to help mobilize finance and spur implementation. The Glasgow-Sharm-el-Sheikh (GLASS) work programme to achieve this has so far lacked focus. At COP27, parties decided to define a framework to measure the goal’s achievement and enable reviews of progress over the next year. — The 2022 UN Climate Change Conference, known as COP27, took place between 7-18 November 2022 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. Photo: Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images. COP27 has seen the global leaders take desperately needed action to address loss and damage – the symptoms of climate change, but still refuse to name, let alone address, the root cause Some concrete progress on adaptation was seen at the COP: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for worldwide extreme weather early warning systems within the next five years, while the Adaptation Fund received more than $230 million for the most climate-vulnerable in 2022. The call from Glasgow to double adaptation finance was repeated, but overall, progress was muted, when parties really needed to come together for implementation of this crucial element of climate action. Not enough done for agriculture and food security Richard King It is welcome that the Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture – adopted in 2017 as the first and only formal UNFCCC agenda item focusing on agriculture and food security – has concluded in a decision to implement a new four-year work programme focused on implementing solutions. While this has an objective of promoting holistic approaches to addressing climate impacts both on and from agriculture and food security, it disappointingly falls short of taking a food systems lens that includes all activities and actors from farm to fork. This year’s COP has clearly demonstrated a growing appreciation of the imperative of tackling food systems in their entirety There is now a small window of opportunity until March 2023 for governments and civil society to shape and broaden this agenda for the next four years. If not in the negotiating halls, then certainly in the myriad side events and discussions focusing on the issue, this year’s COP has clearly demonstrated a growing appreciation of the imperative of tackling food systems in their entirety. An overarching and integrated approach to sustainable food production, distribution, and retail; nutrition and dietary shifts; and addressing food loss and waste will be vital to making comprehensive headway in addressing climate change and other planetary and social challenges. It is important the parties at COP28 in the UAE seize this rising momentum to become the first climate negotiations to make tangible progress on transforming food systems towards sustainability, equitability, and resilience. Rainforest leadership challenges traditional aid Thiago Kanashiro Uehara COP27 served well as a business fair for entrepreneurs wishing to benefit from new carbon markets. But forests, peatlands, and nature-based solutions did not receive the attention they deserve in guaranteeing climate security. The good news is the COP26 pledges on forest finance, for the Congo basin, and for indigenous peoples (IP) and local communities’ (LC) forest tenure are pretty much alive, with disbursement rates at decent levels, albeit rarely directly to IP and LC-led organizations. The bad news is the financialization of forest governance and voluntary sustainability standards in global supply chains are solution ‘myths’ and were exposed by scientists as such at the conference. The time has come for Global North constituents to work together with self-fashioned ‘solution countries’, such as the DRC now and Brazil after 2023 On the second day of COP27, there was a last-minute launch led by the Global North, with Rishi Sunak and Emmanuel Macron announcing the ‘forests and climate leaders’ partnership’. One week later, at the G20 Bali summit, ministers from Indonesia, DR Congo, and Brazil announced a South-South rainforest leadership alliance – referred by some as the ‘OPEC of forests’ – challenging traditional forms of top-down international aid. The climate crisis is one symptom of the inequality crisis engulfing our world at present. The African COP represented a step forward in addressing climate justice, an improvement over COP26 in Glasgow, where the issue was virtually denied. The time has come for Global North constituents to work together with self-fashioned ‘solution countries’, such as the DRC now and Brazil after 2023. An ‘implementation COP’ will be successful only after establishing a new framework of co-leadership in climate action based on principles of justice and strong sustainability. Outcomes of an African COP Christopher Vandome Africa’s contribution to the global energy transition cannot be at the expense of its own industrialization. While pledges of increased financing for adaptation and the landmark establishment of a fund for loss and damage are important steps, the reality of under-disbursement and delivery of promised funds is causing many African leaders to rethink their engagement with multilateral climate initiatives. African leaders are intent on advancing their own strategies for energy generation and adaptation that deliver on national priorities of job creation, sustainable growth, and environmental protection. Many countries strategies involve exploiting gas reserves. But with mounting global pressures against further hydrocarbon extraction, African leaders need to demonstrate to international partners that these operations are part of a long-term transition away from other fossil fuels and contribute towards poverty alleviation. African leaders are intent on advancing their own strategies for energy generation and adaptation that deliver on national priorities Leaders need to be coordinated in their demands to international partners on how to phase out over time as well as de-risk potential stranded assets. President Ramaphosa’s unveiling of the investment plan for the South African Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) was a significant mark of progress to unlocking the $8.5 billion pledge for lowering the economy’s reliance on coal. While progress has at times faltered over the past year, it has been critical that South Africa articulate its own needs and desired energy mix, rather than this be internationally prescribed. It has also demonstrated to other African nations that bilateral not multilateral initiatives may offer a fast-track route to green finance. Full Article