Merkel urges 'ambitious' Glasgow climate summit

World Sunday 06/June/2021 16:45 PM
By: DW
Merkel urges 'ambitious' Glasgow climate summit

The United Nation's COP26 climate summit in November "must provide further impetus for concrete measures" to cut global warming to a "tolerable level," German Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted on Saturday.

In her weekly video podcast, coinciding with World Environment Day, Merkel said the climate goals set in Paris in 2015 and to be finessed in Glasgow, Scotland, later this year, will make 2021 a "significant year" in the transition from fossil fuels.

Europe making progress

Europe has "already come a long way" toward becoming what the EU terms a "climate-neutral economy" by 2050, asserted Merkel — a former environment minister herself from 1994 until 1998 under late conservative chancellor Helmut Kohl.

The Paris Agreement set the aim of limiting global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), compared to pre-industrial levels.

Experts such as the Climate Action Tracker consortium warn that current policies have the world heading for 2.9 degrees Celsius by the end of this century, 2100.

The United Nation's COP26 climate summit in November "must provide further impetus for concrete measures" to cut global warming to a "tolerable level," German Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted on Saturday.

In her weekly video podcast, coinciding with World Environment Day, Merkel said the climate goals set in Paris in 2015 and to be finessed in Glasgow, Scotland, later this year, will make 2021 a "significant year" in the transition from fossil fuels.

Europe making progress

Europe has "already come a long way" toward becoming what the EU terms a "climate-neutral economy" by 2050, asserted Merkel — a former environment minister herself from 1994 until 1998 under late conservative chancellor Helmut Kohl.

The Paris Agreement set the aim of limiting global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), compared to pre-industrial levels.

Experts such as the Climate Action Tracker consortium warn that current policies have the world heading for 2.9 degrees Celsius by the end of this century, 2100.

'Easy to stop' single-use plastics

Referring to World Environment Day, Merkel also highlighted the need to cut plastic waste.

She urged Germany's 83 million residents to embrace from July the EU's ban on the production in Europe of single-use plastics such as straws and cotton buds.

"Doing without them will be easy and will greatly relieve the environment," Merkel said.

The chancellor also highlighted species depletion and losses in biological diversity.

"Up to a million species are threatened with extinction, many of them already in the coming decades," she said. "We urgently need to stop this development."

"We humans are dependent on an intact environment and the preservation of biodiversity," emphasized Merkel.