COP26 Explained

For those who’d like a reminder of what all the fuss is about, the UK government has issued some useful summary documents, to mark 6 months to go until the COP26 climate conference.

Read the key document ‘COP26 EXPLAINED’ from UK government.

This is what they had to say:

What is a COP?

A pivotal moment in the fight against climate change.

In November, the UK, together with our partners Italy, will host an event many believe to be the world’s best last chance to get runaway climate change under control. 

COP26 is the 2021 United Nations climate change conference

For nearly three decades the UN has been bringing together almost every country on earth for global climate summits – called COPs – which stands for ‘Conference of the Parties’. In that time climate change has gone from being a fringe issue to a global priority.

This year will be the 26th annual summit – giving it the name COP26. With the UK as President, COP26 takes place in Glasgow.

In the run up to COP26 the UK is working with every nation to reach agreement on how to tackle climate change. More than 190 world leaders will arrive in Scotland. Joining them will be tens of thousands of negotiators, government representatives, businesses and citizens for twelve days of talks.

Not only is it a huge task but it is also not just yet another international summit. Most experts believe COP26 has a unique urgency. 

To understand why, it’s necessary to look back to another COP. 

The importance of the Paris Agreement

COP21 took place in Paris in 2015. 

For the first time ever, something momentous happened: every country agreed to work together to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees and aim for 1.5 degrees, to adapt to the impacts of a changing climate and to make money available to deliver on these aims. 

The Paris Agreement was born. The commitment to aim for 1.5 degrees is important because every fraction of a degree of warming will result in the loss of many more lives lost and livelihoods damaged.

Under the Paris Agreement, countries committed to bring forward national plans setting out how much they would reduce their emissions – known as Nationally Determined Contributions, or ‘NDCs’. 

They agreed that every five years they would come back with an updated plan that would reflect their highest possible ambition at that time. 

Glasgow is the moment for countries to update their plans 

The run up to this year’s summit in Glasgow is the moment (delayed by a year due to the pandemic) when countries update their plans for reducing emissions. 

But that’s not all. The commitments laid out in Paris did not come close to limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees, and the window for achieving this is closing. 

The decade out to 2030 will be crucial. 

So as momentous as Paris was, countries must go much further than they did even at that historic summit in order to keep the hope of holding temperature rises to 1.5 alive. COP26 needs to be decisive.  

COP26 Explained

International climate summits are complex. 

Here at the UK COP26 team we want to make it as easy as possible for you to understand what COP26 is and what the UK team is working to achieve. 

These are a few helpful sources of information to get you started:

Update from COP26 team, Cabinet Office, to Civil Society and Youth Group, 24 June 2021

The COP26 team at the UK Cabinet Office gave an update to its wider Civil Society and Youth Group on 24 June 2021, which covered the following points –

  • Event planning was still proceeding on the basis of a physical meeting for COP26 in November 2021;

  • The venues were being looked at with social distancing and COVID-19 restrictions in mind, working closely with the Scottish Government;

  • The UNFCCC Blue Zone would be held in the Scottish Events Campus;

  • The UK Government Green Zone would be based at the Glasgow Science Centre;

  • There had been over 4,000 applications to hold events on the Green Zone sector, and shortlisted applicants should be contacted further shortly as the COP26 team worked through them;

  • The UK government was working to ensure the availability of vaccines to UNFCCC accredited delegation – country delegates, observers and media – to facilitate their full participation in COP26;

  • They were also working on tying to address UK and Scottish travel arrangements, rules and restrictions;

  • The COP26 team (and COP26 and beyond) will be posting separately about the outcomes of the G7 meeting, of Environment & Climate Ministers, Finance Ministers and Heads o Government;

  • Focus now turns to the G20, and efforts to secure comparable commitments to those made by the G7 as a means of trying to ensure the success of COP26.

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