Tag Archives: Glasgow

Why I’ll Never Go Back to Countryside After Move to Glasgow, Scotland

This July, my boyfriend and I moved to Glasgow, the biggest city in Scotland.



A building with Glasgow’s slogan, “People Make Glasgow.”

Mikhaila Friel/Insider


My boyfriend, Scott, and I had been talking about getting an apartment together for a couple of months. And when deciding where we would live, Glasgow seemed like a no-brainer. We both attended university in the city, and although I hadn’t lived there before (I commuted in for classes), I got to know it well.

As someone who works remotely, it was important for me to live somewhere that has social activities and a variety of things I could do during my downtime — and Glasgow has just that. 

It’s Scotland’s largest city, with a population of 1,688,907 residents in 2022, according to World Population Review. It is known for its friendly residents, as well as its nightlife and restaurants. Glasgow was named the fourth coolest city in the world by Time Out in 2022, with Scotland’s capital city Edinburgh coming in first place.

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How the flu jab can half the risk of further cardiac arrests in heart attack patients

New studies show how giving a flu jab to heart attack survivors within 72 hours of their brush with death halves the risk of further cardiac arrests

  • Heart attack survivors are at increased risk of suffering a major cardiac arrest
  • The study says the 12 months after a heart attack is a period of incredible risk
  • Prof Naveed Sattar said infection with the flu causes a patient’s blood to thicken 
  • This increases pressure on the heart and can lead to a possible cardiac event  

Anyone who has a heart attack should be given a flu jab within 72 hours – no matter what time of year it is – two major studies have recommended.

Researchers found vaccinating heart disease patients against the winter bug almost halved their chances of dying from a second heart attack in the following 12 months – the period when the risk is greatest.

Professor Naveed Sattar, from Glasgow University’s Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, said: ‘Flu puts stress on your arteries and makes your blood thicker, so if you have heart disease it could tip you over the threshold for a heart attack.

Professor Naveed Sattar, from Glasgow University’s Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, said: ‘Flu puts stress on your arteries and makes your blood thicker, so if you have heart disease it could tip you over the threshold for a heart attack’

‘And the risk of it happening again is greatest in the first six to 12 months. This evidence suggests it’s a good idea to not wait until the winter, and get a flu jab straight away.’

Patients who have suffered a heart attack, or are being treated for heart disease, are already advised to get the annual NHS winter flu jab when it becomes available from October onwards. But for some this can mean a wait of months, during which time they are at risk of a second attack. While flu peaks in winter, infections can occur at any time of year. The solution, the studies suggest, is to routinely vaccinate all heart attack patients while they are still recovering in hospital.

Scientists at Orebro University, Sweden, tracked nearly 3,000 heart attack patients from eight countries, including the UK.

Half got a flu jab within three days of hospital admission and the rest a placebo.

Over the following 12 months, cardiac-related deaths in those who had a flu jab were almost 40 per cent lower than in the placebo group.

The second probe, carried out by a research team from Peru, looked at data for more than 4,000 patients and found that flu vaccination slashed the chances of dying from a second heart attack by 47 per cent.

Scientists at Orebro University, Sweden, tracked nearly 3,000 heart attack patients from eight countries, including the UK

Both studies also found similar rates of second heart attacks, suggesting that the jab does not stop them happening but can lessen the damage they do.

Leading UK cardiologists welcomed the idea.

Professor Martin Cowie, consultant cardiologist at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London, said: ‘This is interesting and could be relatively easy to implement in general practice.’

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Coal stocks lose ground after Glasgow climate deal

Smoke billows from a chimney at a coking factory in Hefei, Anhui province October 2, 2010. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

  • Coal miner stocks fall in China, elsewhere
  • Selling crimps long rally amid energy squeeze
  • Oil down, gas steady
  • China coal futures sink amid output surge

SYDNEY, Nov 15 (Reuters) – An international agreement to reduce coal use dragged miners’ shares lower on Monday, but tight supply of the commodity provided a floor for a sector that has chalked up huge gains this year.

U.N. climate talks in Glasgow ended on Saturday with a deal targeting fossil fuel use. Wording was softened to call for a “phase down” rather than “phase out” of coal after lobbying from India, among others.

Big miners China Shenhua Energy and Yanzhou Coal fell 1% and 2.4% respectively in Hong Kong, where the broader stock market (.HSI)edged up slightly. An index of mainland-listed miners (.CSI000820) fell about 1%. Coal stocks in other regions also came under pressure.

“Climate activists will undoubtedly frame COP26 as failing on coal (and fossil fuels). We look past this frustration (and current energy market conditions) and see ongoing incremental consensus in the need to reduce demand for fossil fuel,” said Cowen analyst John Miller. .

In Indonesia, the world’s biggest coal exporter, declines were exacerbated by surging production in China, a top customer. No. 1 miner Bumi Resources (BUMI.JK)fell 5.7%, while Adaro Energy (ADRO.JK) and Indika Energy (INDY.JK) tumbled 4.5% and 7% respectively.

Shares in Australia-listed thermal coal miner Whitehaven Coal (WHC.AX) fell about 1.6% and rival New Hope (NHC.AX) about 1% in a slightly firmer broad market.

‘CASH GENERATOR’

Metallurgical coal miners South32 (S32.AX) and Coronado Global Resources (CRN.AX) dropped some 1.4% and 4% respectively. The moves extend a recent pullback that has taken the edge off huge year-to-date gains for Whitehaven, South32 and New Hope amid a global energy crunch. They are each up more than 40%.

“The reality is that coal is going to be used during the next decade or so. It’s still going to be a cash generator,” said Mathan Somasundaram, chief executive officer at Sydney-based research firm Deep Data Analytics.

China, the world’s biggest producer and consumer of coal, churned out its highest tonnage in more than six years last month, official data showed, which helped to knock near-term spot prices , on Monday. read more

The Glasgow deal has elicited promises of future cuts to use, resolved rules for carbon markets and also takes aim at fossil fuel subsidies – all of which could speed up the transition to other energy sources. read more

Elsewhere in Asia, Seoul-listed mine owners and suppliers KEPCO (015760.KS), LX International (001120.KS) and Doosan Heavy (034020.KS)traded between a fall of 2.5% and a gain of 0.6% in a broader market that was up 1%. Thai miner Banpu (BANPU.BK) fell 2.7%. Shares in Coal India (COAL.NS) slid 4.3%, also weighed down by soft quarterly results. NTPC (NTPC.NS)edge up.

Among other mining stocks, Anglo American (AAL.L), the world’s third largest exporter of metallurgical coal, fell around 1% in London, while Sasol (SOLJ.J), which operates coal mines in South Africa, was steady.

George Boubouras, head of research at K2 Asset Management in Melbourne, said under-investment in coal projects would probably keep spot prices elevated from a historical perspective but the fuel’s likely eventual demise might limit gains for stocks.

“High thermal coal prices… will not necessarily translate into higher share prices to the same degree,” he said. Oil fell around 1% and gas a touch firmer in European hours and stocks in the sector were broadly steady.

Some investors see uranium filling some of the gap left as energy firms retreat from coal. This hashelped uranium futures to soar along with other commodities in recent weeks.

Large miners have rallied, lifting Canada’s Cameco (CCO.TO) to a decade high last week and Kazakhstan’s Kazatomprom (KZAP.KZ) to a record.

Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Additional reporting Joori Roh in Seoul, Muyu Xu in Beijing, Chandini Monnappa in Bengaluru and Melanie Burton in Melbourne and Danilo Masoni in Milan; Editing by Edwina Gibbs

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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COP26 climate agreement reached in Glasgow with unprecedented reference to fossil fuels

The final text points explicitly to coal, which is the single biggest contributor to climate change. In all 25 COPs before Glasgow, never has an agreement mentioned coal, oil or gas, or even fossil fuels in general, as drivers — let alone the main cause — of the climate crisis.

A visibly teary COP26 President Alok Sharma made the announcement with strikes of a gavel. He orally amended the most recent draft of the text by watering down the language around fossil fuels after India and Iran raised objections to it. The final agreement now refers to a phasing “down” of coal as opposed to a phasing “out.”

The talks went into overtime as deep divisions remained on key issues on Friday evening, when the conference was originally scheduled to end. In addition to the language around fossil fuels, a key sticking point was the amount of money the developed world should pay the Global South to help it adapt to the climate crisis.

Sharma earlier told delegates he was “infinitely grateful” for keeping 1.5 alive. Sharma’s overarching goal was to get a deal that moved the world forward on containing global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Scientists say that limit is needed to avoid worsening impacts of the climate crisis and to steer away from catastrophic climate change.

But several countries voiced opposition to some of the outcomes.

Swiss Environment Minister Simonetta Sommaruga complained that the process to amend language on fossil fuels at the last minute was not transparent enough.

“We don’t need to phase down but to phase out coal and fossil fuel subsidies,” said Sommaruga, who represents the Environmental Integrity Group, which includes six parties to the UN climate change agency.

She added that the EIG chose not to stand in the way of an agreement, but that the group was “disappointed.”

“This will not bring us closer to 1.5 but make it more difficult to reach it,” Sommaruga said.

Seve Paeniu, climate envoy for Tuvalu — a low-lying atoll nation under threat of sea level rise — told journalists before the final session that he was heartened by the progress but that words need to be followed by actions.

“There’s a lot of commitment to take action. So between now the next COP, countries just need to deliver on those commitments. So there’s a lot of work now. I think Glasgow has provided a platform for ambition. The challenge now is for countries to actually deliver on those,” he said.

He was disappointed, however, that there was not a firmer decision on a loss and damage fund, which would have seen wealthy nations pay for climate crisis impacts in more vulnerable countries, like Tuvalu.

“First of all, little countries made our voices heard, but in a negotiation room like this, you’ve got the big countries. So it’s a case of take-it-or-leave-it kind of deal,” he said. “So there was no other option left for us. We just want to work with this and are hopeful that some outcome would come out of this dialogue.”

This is a breaking news story. More to come.

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U.S.-China declaration on climate welcomed

The flags of the United States and China fly from a lamppost in the Chinatown neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, November 1, 2021.

Brian Snyder | Reuters

LONDON — A joint declaration between the United States and China, in which the two superpowers said they would work together on a number of climate-related actions, has taken many by surprise.

Announced Wednesday during the COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow, Scotland, the declaration covers a number of issues, from cutting carbon dioxide and methane emissions to tackling illegal deforestation.

The countries said they will increase their efforts this decade to meet goals of the 2015 Paris climate agreement. Those goals, the declaration reiterated, include holding the increase in global average temperature to “well below” 2 degrees C and to “pursue efforts” to limit it to 1.5 degrees C.

“The two sides are intent on seizing this critical moment to engage in expanded individual and combined efforts to accelerate the transition to a global net zero economy,” the declaration said.

It expressed an intention to establish a working group which will “meet regularly to address the climate crisis and advance the multilateral process, focusing on enhancing concrete actions in this decade.”

The U.S. and China’s declared plan to work with one another was welcomed broadly.

“The unexpected and welcome joint declaration between the United States and China represents an important commitment between the world’s two largest emitters of greenhouse gases,” Genevieve Maricle, director of U.S. climate policy action at the World Wildlife Fund, said in a statement.

Read more about clean energy from CNBC Pro

“No less relevant in the context of this agreement, they are also the two largest economies in the world,” Maricle said.

“Between them they have the power to unlock vast financial flows from the public and private sectors that can speed the transition to a low carbon economy.”

Manish Bapna, the CEO and president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, said it was “good news that the U.S. and China agreed to accelerate climate action and ambition in this decisive decade.”

“The pledge to strengthen cooperation on clean energy, methane, and deforestation from the two largest economies and greenhouse gas emitters is a welcome step forward,” Bapna said.

“But if we are to hold global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, we urgently need to see commitments to cooperate translate into bolder climate targets and credible delivery.”

Elsewhere, the U.N. Secretary General, António Guterres, said via Twitter that he welcomed the agreement between the U.S. and China.

“Tackling the climate crisis requires international collaboration and solidarity, and this is an important step in the right direction,” Guterres said.

In another tweet, Frans Timmermans, the European Commission’s executive vice-president for the European Green Deal, said it was good news the U.S. and China had “found common ground on climate.”

“This is a challenge which transcends politics,” he said. “Bilateral cooperation between the two biggest global emitters should boost negotiations at #COP26. Now we must find the global deal that keeps 1.5 degrees alive.”

The references to 1.5 degrees are a nod to the Paris Agreement, which looms large over discussions taking place at Glasgow.

Described by the United Nations as a legally-binding international treaty on climate change, the Paris Agreement aims to “limit global warming to well below 2, preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius, compared to pre-industrial levels.”

The task is huge, and the United Nations has noted that 1.5 degrees Celsius is considered to be “the upper limit” when it comes to avoiding the worst consequences from climate change.

Others reacting to the declaration included Jennifer Morgan, executive director of Greenpeace International. Morgan said it was “always welcome news when the world’s two biggest emitters cooperate on climate change, and a reset of their relationship on this crucial issue is overdue.”

“Their statement recognises that the 1.5C goal is at the heart of any credible climate plan and they frame the 2020s as the decade where we need to see real action,” she went on to state. “Those things matter, especially from these two countries.”

Morgan argued that, ultimately, the statement from the U.S. and China fell short of the call from “climate vulnerable countries” who were “demanding that nations come back to the table every year with greater ambition until the 1.5C gap is closed.”

“So, it’s good to see these two at the table together, but if this reset is going to turn into a genuine breakthrough that builds confidence around the world, then they need to step up their level of ambition and their commitment to implementation.”

This needed to start in Glasgow, Morgan said, “where every country should be using the last two days of these talks to get the deal the world needs.”

The U.K. is hosting COP26 between Oct. 31 and Nov. 12.



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Draft deal at UN climate talks calls for end to coal use

GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) — Governments are considering calling for pulling the plug on coal power, the single biggest source of man-made greenhouse gas emissions, according to a draft deal under negotiation in U.N. climate talks.

The draft released Wednesday at the talks in Glasgow, Scotland, calls for accelerating “the phasing out of coal and subsidies for fossil fuels,” though it sets no timeline.

The early version of the final document also expresses “alarm and concern” about how much Earth has already warmed and urges countries to cut carbon dioxide emissions by about half by 2030. Pledges so far from governments don’t add up to that frequently stated goal.

Some nations, especially island states whose very existence is threatened by climate change, warned that the draft didn’t go far enough in requiring action to limit increases in global temperatures or in helping poorer countries to pay for adapting to the warming and for losses from it.

“‘Urging,’ ‘calling,’ ‘encouraging,’ and ‘inviting’ is not the decisive language that this moment calls for,” Aubrey Webson, Antigua and Barbuda’s U.N. ambassador, said in a statement.

With time running out in the climate summit, a clear message had to be sent, he added: “To our children, and the most vulnerable communities, that we hear you and we are taking this seriously.”

Governments agreed in a landmark 2015 deal in Paris to jointly reduce emissions enough to keep the global temperature rise “well below” 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times, with a more stringent target of trying to keep warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) preferred.

That would require a dramatic reduction in emissions from the burning of coal, oil and gas that remain the world’s top source of energy despite the growth of renewables like wind and solar power. But setting deadlines for phasing out fossil fuels is highly sensitive to countries that still depend on them for economic growth, including China and India, and to major exporters of coal such as Australia. The future of coal is also a hot-button issue in the United States, where a spat among Democrats has held up one of President Joe Biden’s signature climate bills.

Greenpeace International director Jennifer Morgan, a long-time climate talks observer, said that the call in the draft to phase out coal and subsidies for fossil fuels would be a first in a U.N. climate deal, but the lack of a timeline would limit the pledge’s effectiveness.

“This isn’t the plan to solve the climate emergency. This won’t give the kids on the streets the confidence that they’ll need,” Morgan said.

European Union climate chief Frans Timmermans was more upbeat about the negotiations.

“Consider my sleeves rolled. We’re ready and willing to make sure we deliver on the highest possible levels of ambition, leading to prompt global action,” he said.

The draft is likely to change, but it doesn’t yet include full agreements on the three major goals that the U.N. set going into the negotiations: for rich nations to give poorer ones $100 billion a year in climate aid, to ensure that half of that money goes to adapting to worsening global warming, and the pledge to slash global carbon emissions by 2030.

The draft acknowledges “with regret” that rich nations have failed to live up to the climate finance pledge. Currently they are providing around $80 billion a year, which poorer nations that need financial help both in developing green energy systems and adapting to the worst of climate change say isn’t enough.

Papua New Guinea Environment Minister Wera Mori said given the lack of financial aid that his country may “rethink” efforts to cut logging, coal mining and even coming to the U.N. talks.

The draft says the world should try to achieve “net-zero (emissions) around mid-century,” a target that was endorsed by leaders of the Group of 20 biggest economies in a summit just before the Glasgow talks. That means requiring countries to pump only as much greenhouse gas into the atmosphere as can be absorbed again through natural or artificial means.

Highlighting the challenge of meeting those goals, the document “expresses alarm and concern that human activities have caused around 1.1 C (2 F) of global warming to date and that impacts are already being felt in every region.”

Separate draft proposals were also released on other issues being debated at the talks, including rules for international carbon markets and the frequency by which countries have to report on their efforts.

The draft calls on countries that don’t have national goals that are in line with the 1.5- or 2-degree limits to come back with stronger targets next year. Depending on how the language is interpreted, the provision could apply to most countries.

“This is crucial language,” World Resources Institute International Climate Initiative Director David Waskow said Wednesday. “Countries really are expected and are on the hook to do something in that timeframe to adjust.’’

In a nod to one of the big issues for poorer countries, the draft vaguely “urges” developed nations to compensate developing countries for “loss and damage,” a phrase that some rich nations don’t like. But there are no concrete financial commitments.

As the talks enter their final stage, Britain’s Alok Sharma, who is chairing the negotiations, acknowledged that “significant issues remain unresolved.”

“My big, big ask of all of you is to please come armed with the currency of compromise,” he told negotiators as they prepared for another long night of talks. “What we agree in Glasgow will set the future for our children and grandchildren, and I know that we will not want to fail them.”

___

Associated Press journalists Ellen Knickmeyer and Helena Alves contributed to this report.

___

Follow AP’s climate coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate. Follow Borenstein, Jordans and Ghosal on Twitter.



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UN climate agency publishes draft of final Glasgow COP26 deal | Climate Crisis News

Negotiators from nearly 200 countries will work from the draft to strike a final deal before the summit ends on Friday.

The United Nations climate agency on Wednesday published a first draft (PDF) of the political decision countries will issue at the end of the COP26 summit.

Negotiators from nearly 200 countries will work from the draft to strike a final deal before the summit ends on Friday.

The “COP cover decision” is being closely watched for what it might commit countries to do to bridge the gap between their current climate targets and the more ambitious action scientists say is needed to avert disastrous levels of warming.

More soon…



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Obama to take swipe at Trump for ‘four years of active hostility’ on climate in Glasgow speech

But as much as Obama is expected to express regret for former President Donald Trump’s “four years of active hostility towards climate science” and the climate denialism which defines the modern Republican Party, he’ll express a deeper, broader worry that politics all over the world is falling short of what needs to be done to save the planet.

“I recognize that we’re living in a moment when international cooperation has atrophied—in part because of the pandemic, in part because of the rise of nationalism and tribal impulses around the world, in part because of a lack of leadership on America’s part for four years on a host of multilateral issues,” Obama will say according to a copy of the prepared remarks obtained exclusively first by CNN.

Obama’s speech comes a week after President Joe Biden’s own appearance at the conference, in an appearance during which he explicitly apologized for Trump’s abandonment of the Paris climate accords. And it comes amid major international doubts that Biden, Congress or America is actually serious about climate change, no matter what Obama says.

Pleading that climate change should be the one issue which transcends politics, Obama will say he has his own doubts this is possible which he tries to fight back.

“As I’m sure is true for all of you, there are times when I feel discouraged, when the future seems bleak, and I am doubtful that humanity can get its act together before it’s too late,” Obama is expected to say. “And yet, whenever I feel such despondency, I remind myself that cynicism is the recourse of cowards. We can’t afford hopelessness.”

Obama’s appearance at an international conference is already an unusual move for a former president, as is his public criticism of “my successor” — the closest it seems Obama will come to saying Trump’s name. Also unusual is his criticism of current foreign leaders, as he’s expected to call out Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin for skipping the COP 26 entirely. He’ll call that decision “particularly discouraging,” adding “their national plans reflect what appears to be a dangerous absence of urgency, a willingness to maintain the status quo, on the part of both those countries.”

Addressing the younger people in the audience, Obama is expected to say, “you’re right to be frustrated.”

“For most of your lives, you’ve been bombarded with warnings about what the future will look like if we don’t address the climate crisis,” Obama will say. “And you’ve grown up watching many of the adults who are in a position to do something about it either act like the problem doesn’t exist or refuse to make the hard decisions necessary to address it.”

Picking up on a theme he has repeatedly hit on the campaign trail back home, Obama will plead, particularly with young people, not to give up on politics. “Vote like your life depends on it,” he’ll say, since “the cold, hard fact is that we will not have more ambitious climate change plans unless governments get behind them.”

Obama will warn, though, that young people need to rethink their approach. He’ll pick up on another theme he’s expressed before that today’s youth mistakes online activism and insular virtue signaling for making a difference. “Protests are necessary. Hashtag campaigns can spread awareness. But to build the broad-based coalitions necessary for bold action, we will have to persuade people who either don’t currently agree with us or are simply indifferent,” Obama will say. “To change those folks, we can’t just yell at them, or tweet at them, or inconvenience them by blocking traffic through protests. We’re going to have to listen to the objections and reluctance of ordinary people, understand their realities, and work with them so that serious action on climate change doesn’t impact their lives adversely.”

Obama is expected to press the point that local governments and many privates businesses stayed committed to hitting the Paris accord targets, despite Trump’s withdrawal of the federal government. They should believe in Biden’s commitment now, he’ll add, and say he has faith a larger Build Back Better plan with more extensive climate measures will soon pass Congress, despite the hold-ups in Washington last week which led to a vote on only one of the infrastructure bills.

Nonetheless, Obama will praise the “meaningful progress” made by world leaders through the agreements reached last week in Scotland—such as those to combat methane emissions and deforestation, as well as those signed by two dozen countries not including the United States to end public subsidies for fossil fuels and pledging to end the use of coal completely.

While in Scotland, Obama will also meet with several groups of climates leaders, as well as business and philanthropic leaders, and local elected officials. He’ll be introduced by an Obama Foundation leader who is a Northern Mariana Islands representative, and spend time with several others during the trip.

Obama had championed addressing environmental issues while in office, but former President Donald Trump — a longtime climate crisis denier — attempted to remove many of the policy guardrails installed by the Obama administration to limit the emissions of greenhouse gases. Since taking office, Biden has been reversing many of these actions by the Trump administration and has made ambitious pledges to tackle the climate crisis.

Notably, the climate summit is taking place five years after the Paris Agreement took effect. In 2015, after the COP21, more than 190 countries signed onto the agreement at the time to limit the increase in global temperatures to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, but preferably to 1.5 degrees.

Biden reentered the Paris Agreement after former Trump pulled the United States out of it, and apologized to his fellow world leaders in remarks on the first day of COP26.

“I guess I shouldn’t apologize, but I do apologize for the fact that the United States — the last administration — pulled out of the Paris Accords and put us sort of behind the 8-ball,” the President said last week in Glasgow.

CNN’s Jeff Zeleny and Kate Sullivan contributed to this report.

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Big crowds rally in rainy Glasgow for COP26 climate action

GLASGOW, Nov 6 (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of protesters marched on Saturday through rainy downtown Glasgow, and in many other cities around the world, to demand bolder action at the U.N. climate conference.

Students, activists and climate-concerned citizens linked arms as they moved slowly through the streets of the Scottish city, host of the COP26 meeting that began on Monday.

Some pushed children in strollers, some danced to stay warm. Police watched the procession from the flanks.

“It’s good to have your voice heard,” said Kim Travers of Edinburgh. “Even with the rain, I think it makes it a bit more dramatic.”

Just a few blocks from the procession, back-room negotiations continued at the COP26 meeting. On stage, speakers sounded the alarm over the threat of global warming to food security.

Since the climate talks began, national delegations have been working to agree on technical details for the final pact, to be announced at the end of the conference after more negotiations this week.

The first week also saw countries make a slew of promises to phase out coal, slash emissions of the potent greenhouse gas methane and reduce deforestation. Business leaders and financiers, meanwhile, pledged to invest more in climate solutions.

But activists have demanded that the meeting make more progress. read more

Ros Cadoux, a grandmother from Edinburgh, said she came to march for future generations. “If you’ve got kids and grandkids – my God, What else could you do?”

Colorful banners bore slogans ranging from earnest calls for “Climate Justice Now,” to the more comical: “No planet = no beer”.

One group bounced along to the sound of a drum and chanted “Get Up, Get Down, Keep that Carbon in the Ground.”

“The climate crisis is about the survival of humanity as we know it,” said Philipp Chmel, who traveled from Germany for the march. “It’s up to the youth and the workers, the working class, to bring about the change that is necessary.”

One group of youths – some with bullhorns – blamed companies for the climate crisis and chanted calls in favour of socialism while punching their fists in the air.

Police officers keep guard as demonstrators attend a protest amid the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26), in Glasgow, Scotland, Britain, November 6, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

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Around midday, the rain cleared for a few hours, and an enormous rainbow streaked across the sky.

“If ever there was a time for activism, and if ever there was a time for the people to come out onto the streets, then it is today,” said University of Glasgow student Theo Lockett, 20.

Climate activists held rallies in many other cities, including Seoul, Melbourne, Copenhagen and London.

CONFERENCE HALLS

During a panel of speeches on Saturday, Democratic U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse urged companies to rein in groups lobbying politicians to block climate action.

“Corporate members who made big promises here at this COP have got to get their trade associations under control so they’re not undercutting our work in Congress,” said Whitehouse, who was at COP26 with a bipartisan group of Congress members.

He also told journalists that it was crucial to resolve a carbon price for carbon markets — one of the key sticking points in the negotiations.

Earlier at the conference, actor Idris Elba acknowledged that he had few credentials to speak on climate change, but said he was at COP26 to amplify the climate threat to global food security.

Sitting on the same panel, climate justice campaigner Vanessa Nakate of Uganda implored the world to stop burning fossil fuels, the main cause of rising global temperatures.

“We are watching farms collapse and livelihoods lost due to floods, droughts and swarms of locusts,” she said – all of which scientists say are being exacerbated by climate change.

“The climate crisis means hunger and death for many people in my country and across Africa.”

Civil society leaders and representatives from companies like Unilever (ULVR.L) and PepsiCo (PEP.O) spoke about corporate responsibility in making trade and commerce less of a burden on nature.

Speaking about using satellite technology to monitor global landscapes, the director and founder of Google Earth Outreach (GOOGL.O) urged better stewardship of the world’s forests.

“We don’t want to be writing the obituary of our planet in high resolution,” Rebecca Moore said.

Reporting by William James, Lucy Marks and Simon Jessop in Glasgow
Additional reporting by Natalie Thomas and Katy Daigle
Editing by Frances Kerry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Live updates from climate summit in Glasgow

12:30 p.m.: Holcim CEO: Sustainability is ‘the only way forward’ for long-term profitability

Holcim CEO Jan Jenisch told CNBC earlier on Thursday that those investors in companies like his, seeking long-term profit, factoring in sustainability is “the only way forward.”

He said that his company was seeing much more interest from its customers to see green building material solutions, which was “not the case 5 years ago.”

Jenisch pointed out that 30% of the carbon footprint was in the build phase of developments so he believed it was important to make the customer aware that they can make a difference in this area.

Vicky McKeever

12 p.m.: COP26 president asked about the absence of key oil and gas industry figures

Britain’s President for COP26 Alok Sharma makes his opening speech at The Procedural Opening of the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland on October 31, 2021, the first day of the conference.

DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS | AFP | Getty Images

COP26 President Alok Sharma told reporters on Thursday that “everyone is welcome” in the green zone, the public area, of the COP26 climate summit, when asked about the absence of some key figures from the oil and gas industry at the conference.

Sharma explained that the U.K. presidency for the COP26 climate summit was not, however, about being in charge of who comes into the blue zone, where negotiations among world leaders are taking place.

He added that the “substantive issue today on energy transition day is that we have got some really significant commitments that will drive down emissions and ultimately move us towards a clean energy transition globally.”

Vicky McKeever

9:00 a.m.: U.N.’s Espinosa ‘cautiously optimistic’ about outcome of COP26

Patricia Espinosa, the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, has told CNBC she feels “really encouraged” by what she has seen so far at COP26.

8:44 a.m.: IEA tasked with policing COP26 pledges

The International Energy Agency has been tasked with ensuring countries are honoring the climate pledges they made during the COP26 summit.

During a speech at the event on Thursday, IEA chief Fatih Birol said the organization had also been asked by the COP Presidency to provide policy advice to countries who were “not doing their jobs in line with their promises.”

— Chloe Taylor

8:31 a.m.: COP26 pledges would limit global warming to 1.8 degrees Celsius, IEA says

IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol gives a presentation on December 20, 2019 in Istanbul, Turkey.

Celal Gunes | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

If every pledge made at COP26 is honored, it would put the world on track to limit global warming to 1.8 degrees Celsius, the IEA has said.

“If all the pledges on carbon neutrality and methane were to be fully implemented, we would have a temperature increase trajectory which is 1.8 degrees Celsius,” Fatih Birol, executive director of the IEA told an audience at the summit on Thursday.

The Paris Agreement’s objective is to prevent global temperatures from rising by any more than 2 degrees Celsius, although the treaty’s more ambitious target is to prevent global temperature rises exceeding 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Birol said the 1.8 degrees Celsius trajectory, predicted by the IEA’s models, was “extremely encouraging” and “excellent” news, but he conceded on Twitter that more work needed to be done.

— Chloe Taylor

7:28 a.m.: Indonesia says it didn’t agree to end deforestation by 2030: Report

Indonesia has claimed an agreement on deforestation signed at COP26 did not include a commitment to end deforestation by 2030, Reuters reported.

“The declaration issued does not refer at all to end deforestation by 2030,” vice foreign minister, Mahendra Siregar, told the news agency. His comments came after Indonesia’s environment minister said the commitment would be “inappropriate and unfair,” according to Reuters.

The pledge, signed by 100 countries — including Indonesia — on Tuesday, saw participating nations promise to work collectively “to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation by 2030.”

— Chloe Taylor

6:28 a.m.: ‘The end of coal is in sight’

“The end of coal is in sight,” U.K. lawmaker Alok Sharma has told delegates in Glasgow.

Announcing a pledge to end the use of coal signed by 77 countries, Sharma also noted that every G-7 nation has committed to end international coal financing this year.

Sharma said the statement published on Thursday would include a commitment to phase out coal in the 2030s for major economies, and in the 2040s for the rest of the world.

“It has 77 signatories, 23 of which are making commitments on ending coal for the first time,” he told the conference.

— Chloe Taylor

6:26 a.m.: Countries pledge to phase out coal

Twenty-eight countries, including Ukraine, Poland and Singapore, have joined an international pledge to phase out coal, bringing the total number of countries and organizations involved in the Powering Past Coal Alliance to 165.

However, the world’s biggest coal burners, China, the U.S. and India, have not signed up to the alliance.
Coal, which fuels more than a third of the energy consumed worldwide, is the single biggest contributor to climate change.

 The PPCA, whose existing members include the U.K., New Zealand and Germany — Europe’s largest consumer of coal — is working to “advance the transition from unabated coal power generation to clean energy.

— Chloe Taylor

3:44 a.m.: More than half of FTSE 100 firms commit to eliminate emissions by 2050

Sixty of the firms listed on the U.K.’s FTSE 100 exchange – made up of the U.K.’s biggest public companies by market cap – have now committed to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050 at the latest.

The commitment is a pledge taken by the companies as a part of signing up to the U.N.’s Race to Zero campaign.

According to the British government, the number of U.K.-listed firms joining the movement have quadrupled since a year ago. Those participating in the pledge now represent a total market capital of over £1 trillion ($1.37 trillion).

More than 5,000 companies of all sizes have joined the program worldwide.

— Chloe Taylor

3:21 a.m.: What energy transition? Renewables can’t meet demand

The world wants to “transition” away from fossil fuels toward green energy, but the difficult reality is this: Dirty fuels are not going away — or even declining — anytime soon.

The total amount of renewable energy that’s available is growing. That’s good news for a world threatened by potentially devastating climate change.

But the increase in renewable energy is still lower than the increase in global energy demand overall. A “transition” from fossil fuels may come someday, but for now, renewable energy isn’t even keeping pace with rising energy demand — so fossil fuel demand is still growing.

— Weizhen Tan

3:15 a.m.: What happened at COP26 on Wednesday?

Bill Gates photographed at the COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow, Scotland, on November 2, 2021.

EVAN VUCCI | AFP | Getty Images

Here are some of the biggest developments from the climate summit on Wednesday:

The U.K. announced plans for the country to become the “first-ever net zero aligned financial center,” saying it will soon be mandatory for companies to publish decarbonization plans.

Bill Gates expressed doubts that the world would be able to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the U.S. would join European countries in backing the issuing of green bonds aimed at helping developing countries boost sustainable infrastructure investment.

And President Joe Biden hit out at China and Russia over their absence from COP26, telling reporters it was a “big mistake” for their leaders not to attend the conference.

— Chloe Taylor

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