Tag: Alok Sharma

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at the COP27 Closing Plenary

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at the COP27 Closing Plenary

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the outgoing COP26 President, at Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt on 20 November 2022.

    Thank you Mr President to you and your team for all your work. And I also want to thank the secretariat and the Chairs of the subsidiary bodies.

    It hasn’t been easy. But I want to begin by recognising the progress on loss and damage. This is historic.

    The decision that we have taken here has the potential to support and increase that support for the most vulnerable.

    And I very much welcome that.

    And the scale and the range of needs will require contributions from the widest range of sources and parties.

    Of course the critical work now lies ahead to ensure that potential is realised.

    But friends, and I have to say this, this is not a moment of unqualified celebration.

    Many of us came here to safeguard the outcomes that we secured in Glasgow, and to go further still.

    In our attempts to do that, we have had a series of very challenging conversations over the past few days.

    Indeed those of us who came to Egypt to keep 1.5 degrees alive,

    and to respect what every single one of us agreed to in Glasgow,

    have had to fight relentlessly to hold the line.

    We have had to battle to build on one of the key achievements of Glasgow.

    The call on all Parties to revisit and strengthen their Nationally Determined Contributions.

    We have ultimately reiterated that call here.

    And it is critical that commitment is delivered by all of us, including by the major emitters in this room who did not come forward this year.

    But we also wanted to take a definitive step forward.

    We joined with many Parties to propose a number of measures that would have contributed to this.

    Emissions peaking before 2025, as the science tells us is necessary.

    Not in this text.

    Clear follow-through on the phase down of coal.

    Not in this text.

    A clear commitment to phase out all fossil fuels.

    Not in this text.

    And the energy text, weakend, in the final minutes.

    Friends, I said in Glasgow that the pulse of 1.5 degrees was weak.

    Unfortunately, it remains on life support.

    And all of us need to look ourselves in the mirror, and consider if we have fully risen to that challenge over the past two weeks.

    Colleagues, I will not be in this chair at COP28, when our ambition, and our implementation, is tested in the Global Stocktake year.

    But I assure you, indeed I promise you, that if we do not step up soon,

    and rise above these minute-to-midnight battles to hold the line,

    we will all be found wanting.

    Each of us will have to explain that, to our citizens, to the world’s most vulnerable countries and communities,

    and ultimately to the children and grandchildren to whom many of us now go home.

    Thank you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at COP27 on Delivering on Ambitious Climate Commitments

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at COP27 on Delivering on Ambitious Climate Commitments

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, on 15 November 2022.

    Thank you Minister Samuda for your kind words and actually for a great explanation of what this partnership has achieved and continues to achieve.

    And it is remarkable.

    We’ve got 200 members, 120 countries – developing countries, developed countries – and 80 institutions, all working together.

    This is a unique platform and it’s about coordinating between donors and developing nations, ensuring they support the implementation of NDCs [Nationally Determined Contributions] across the world.

    Now from a UK perspective, we’ve been proud and honoured to co-chair with our friends and we’ve also put money behind this process. We’ve committed £27 million in core funding from 2019 to 2025.

    If I look back a year from now, we had almost 200 countries that came together and forged the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    And I was very proud of that. I was very proud of everyone who helped to deliver that.

    The Minister talked about the impact of climate change around the world.

    But it is the case that the chronic threat of climate change is getting worse.

    And that’s why countries came together at COP26, because they understood it was in their common self-interest to act and to deliver on the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    And one of the key elements of that was the ratchet.

    So, we went from NDCs coming forward every five years, to every country signing up to revise their NDC, to align it with the Paris temperature goal by the end of this year.

    Now we’ve had 33 countries that have come forward so far.

    We need more.

    It was a commitment we’ve all made and we need to deliver on it.

    And actually, if you look at the NDCs – that were delivered going into COP26 and those that have come forward since – and if you take into account the net zero commitments we’ve already got from countries around the world, particularly the G20, 19 of the G20 have committed to net zero.

    If you take all of that into account, what the IEA [International Energy Agency] and UNEP [United Nations Environment Programme] tell you is that we could be heading towards 1.7°C of global warming by the end of the century.

    It’s not 1.5 friends, it is not 1.5.

    But it is progress.

    And if you’re going to make this progress, you have to deliver on your NDCs and on your detailed commitments as well.

    That requires financial support, it requires capacity building in certain nations.

    That’s why we should be really proud that this partnership has supported 64 countries to raise ambition and to improve the quality of their NDCs.

    More than £1.4 billion in technical assistance has been provided.

    Minister Samuda has eloquently outlined a lot of the other things the partnership has done – the need for more finance, the need to double adaptation finance from developed nations that we agreed in Glasgow as well.

    This partnership has gone further. It’s about championing easier access to finance and much more transparency as well.

    We’ve got the new online hub that has been put forward. That will help as part of this process.

    What I would say to you all is that we can’t lose sight of why we are doing this.

    Yes, this is about cleaning up our environment. Yes, this is about delivering a better future for generations to come.

    But it is also about economic growth.

    This is about millions of new green jobs. It’s about billions, trillions of private sector investment flowing into the sunrise industries of today and tomorrow.

    That’s why the work that we do collectively is so vital.

    And I just want to end, friends, by saying that I think it is absolutely vital that we keep 1.5 alive.

    We cannot lose 1.5 at this COP.

    We can’t afford to go backwards.

    We cannot accept a weak outcome coming out of COP27.

    And I hope you’ll join us in making sure that we have ambition.

    Because what I want to see coming out of this COP is progress.

    Progress and building on the ambition that almost 200 countries delivered together in forging the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    So please join us in calling for more ambition at this COP.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at High-Level Ministerial Round Table Conference

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at High-Level Ministerial Round Table Conference

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the out-going COP President, on 14 November 2022.

    Thank you, Minister Jorgenson.

    Can I just remind all of us friends, that at COP26 we did resolve collectively to peruse efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 degrees.

    I have always said what we agreed in Glasgow and Paris has to be the baseline of our ambition.

    We’ve got to stick to that commitment. We cannot allow any backsliding.

    But we are already at 1.1 degrees global warming and I know I don’t have to remind all of you the impact of that around the world.

    Even at 1.5 degrees we are still going to have devastating outcomes for many millions. As our friend from Bangladesh reminded us 1.5 needs to be a red line.

    And this cannot be the COP where we lose 1.5 degrees.

    So, we’ve got to fight for this and every fraction of a degree absolutely makes a difference.

    And it’s the difference, for very many, including each of your countries, between a tolerable existence and an impossible future.

    Let me remind you a year ago what Mia Mottley said – in Glasgow she said 2 degrees “would be a death sentence” for very many nations around the world.

    I believe we can keep 1.5 alive – we’ve got the business community on our side.

    We all would have seen on Saturday, 200 international businesses signing up a to an open letter in defence of 1.5.

    We are seeing impressive sectoral impacts – renewables, zero emission vehicles.

    We’ve heard about that this morning.

    Yes, there is a serious work going on with our finances. We need to be in a place where we can see more in terms of MDB reform, we need to do more on JETP. Yes, we need to include more on finance.

    But on the 1.5 we need to make sure that we reaffirm our commitments to that.

    We’ve got a G20 leaders meeting going on right now.

    They’ve showed leadership last year. They need to show that again.

    They need to, coming out of that G20, to reaffirm their commitment to Paris and to Glasgow.

    In terms of mitigations outcomes here, really quickly there are four things we need to have.

    One is for those countries that have not set out their revised NDC to do so aligning with 1.5, we’ve got 33 countries that have already done so including the UK.

    Secondly let’s make clear our commitments to the science, no rowing back on the science, we heard from the science this morning.

    Thirdly, further steps to phasing out coal phasing out fossil fuel subsidies.

    And fourthly we need to agree the legalities on the Mitigation Work Programme to shift the dial on implementation and ambition.

    The reality is without progress on mitigation we are going to beyond our ability to adapt and of course I want to see progress made on loss and damage here but unless we stick to the mitigation piece all of that is going to be a lot more difficult.

    So, friends in conclusion, we’ll either leave Egypt having kept 1.5 alive or this will be the COP where we lose 1.5.

    You need to work out how you want future generations to look upon this COP and each of us individually as countries.

    It’s really up to us to decide, I hope we will decide to keep 1.5 alive, thank you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at COP27 Breakthrough Agenda – One Year On

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at COP27 Breakthrough Agenda – One Year On

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the President of COP26, on 11 November 2022.

    Ladies and Gentlemen, good morning and welcome to the UK Pavilion and decarbonisation day.

    We are half way through COP and obviously I can see the experienced folk who are able to get here at 8am in the morning, others are flagging but thank you for coming to this important event.

    Can I also say that today marks Armistice Day and the UK Pavilion will be marking a 2 minute silence at 1pm. You’re all welcome but if you are coming please try and get there 5 minutes before 1pm.

    Ministers, colleagues, friends. Good morning to you, firstly a big thank you to everyone who helped get us to this point when it comes to the Breakthrough Agendas.

    And, you have been incredibly supportive over the three years of the UK’s Presidency and I know that you will do the same for our friends in Egypt as well, both at this COP but also in their presidency year as well.

    So we are marking a one-year launch anniversary of the Breakthrough Agenda in Glasgow.

    And, just a reflection on decarbonisation. We’re all doing our bit domestically in our countries and when I was Business and Energy Secretary in our Government, we launched the 10 point plan for a green industrial revolution looking at a whole range of sectors where we needed to decarbonise rapidly.

    We launched our energy white paper so there is a lot of work that certainly the UK has done and each of you have done domestically as well in your countries.

    The aim of the Breakthrough Agenda was actually to bring countries together to collaborate and make sure that we decarbonise the most critical sectors: Road Transport, Power, Agriculture, Hydrogen and Steel.

    And I was really pleased to say that we had 45 governments coming together and they account for around 75 percent of global GDP, so a real heft behind this Breakthrough Agenda work.

    And the aim of it of course is to deploy innovative and sustainable decarbonisation solutions, and very importantly to make them accessible and affordable for everyone.

    And for people like Stephen Guilbeault, my friend Grant Shapps, ministers who talk to their counterparts around the world will know that one of the big asks of many developing nations is technology at affordable levels as well as finance.

    This is an agenda that will help us get there and we have made really good progress over the last year

    If you have a look at Zero Emission Vehicles.

    There has been a 95 percent increase in global sales, with 1.5 million sold in the first quarter of this year.

    And the pace of that is accelerating, same thing with renewables with a big increase this year.

    And if you have a look at what the IEA has said, their analysis shows that of all the newly installed energy capacity across the world in 2021, 90% of that was renewables and they expect the same thing in 2022 and 2023 as well.

    So I am really pleased that we are making progress across some of these agendas.

    I want to welcome Cambodia and Austria, who have recently endorsed the Breakthrough Agenda.

    I also want to thank our friends in Germany, Cambodia, Australia and Ireland for endorsing the Agriculture Breakthrough.

    And thank you to our friends in France, who have expanded our scope and they have the intent now to launch a Buildings Breakthrough, which as you know in the UK 25% of emissions come from buildings, they’re going to do that in collaboration with our friends from Morocco.

    And of course thank you also to Canada, Steven who stated their intent to launch a Cement Breakthrough as well.

    But the reality is we know that as with all the commitments we got in Glasgow, that none of this will count for anything unless we actually follow through and we implement so I hope that is something that we will be doing together.

    Now one of the other things that people have said to me during this year is that you launched lots of initiatives in Glasgow but what happens when your presidency ends and it has ended.

    And what we have tried to do is to house many of these in different forums so that the work can continue

    So I can tell you that Mission Innovation and the Clean Energy Ministerial is going to take on the joint stewardship of the Breakthrough Agenda, they’ll do that for an initial pilot phase of one year.

    Many of you were with us in New York as well at the UN General Assembly and you will know that on the side lines we also launched the first Breakthrough Agenda Report, put together by the IEA, by IRENA and the High Level Champions, so thank you to all of them and the ministers who attended that meeting at the UK mission

    And subsequent of that we have agreed to launch a set of specific and time-bound priority actions.

    Four that I want to highlight.

    One, collectively we will be developing standards and rules for trade.

    Secondly, we are developing demand creation plans.

    Thirdly, we are working to improve the provision of finance, international assistance and research.

    And fourthly we are taking steps to enhance development and demonstration.

    Now I just want to give you a concrete example, one of the priority actions focuses on the research, development and deployment of technologies at that really crucial intersection of climate and food security, and that’s work being done as part of the Agriculture Breakthrough.

    And I am also delighted to tell you that 28 leading countries in these areas have agreed to take forward these actions across all five sectors, and collectively that represents over 50 percent of global GDP.

    The final thing I want to say is that you all know this, the cost of inaction on this issue is going to be significantly more than the cost of action.

    And we have a real opportunity here to build economies and to build green jobs and actually at the end of the day deliver not only a clean environment but also a wealthier set of communities across the world.

    So thank you for everything you are doing and we look forward to continuing to work with you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at the Ceremonial Opening Speech at COP27

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at the Ceremonial Opening Speech at COP27

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, on 6 November 2022.

    Distinguished delegates, ladies and gentlemen, it gives me great pleasure to declare open the twenty-seventh session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

    Friends, let me begin by thanking our friends here in Egypt for such a warm welcome.

    My team and I know just how demanding hosting such a conference is, and how many people have worked incredibly hard to get us to this point.

    So congratulations, and thank you again.

    Now as the UK Presidency comes to an end, I want to reflect on what we achieved together in Glasgow,

    and also what has happened since in our Presidency year.

    Last November, the world gathered at COP26 against a fractured and fractious geopolitics, as a once-in-a-century pandemic dragged mercilessly on.

    And yet, leaders recognised that, despite their differences, often profound, cooperation on climate and nature is in our collective self-interest.

    And thanks to that spirit of cooperation and compromise, we forged together the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    Collectively we achieved something historic, and something hopeful.

    With your help:

    We closed the Paris Rulebook.

    We made unprecedented progress on coal, and on fossil fuel subsidies.

    We committed to rapidly scale up finance, and to double adaptation finance by 2025.

    We reiterated the urgency of action and support for loss and damage, and established serious work on funding arrangements.

    We hope that this will pave the way for a formal agenda item and tangible progress here in Egypt.

    And every Party, and I repeat this, every Party agreed to revisit and strengthen their 2030 emissions reduction targets, to align with Paris.

    I want to thank the 29 countries which have already updated their NDCs since Glasgow.

    From Australia to Micronesia.

    India to Vanuatu.

    Norway to Gabon.

    And we also made progress outside the negotiating rooms, with commitments from business, from finance, from philanthropy.

    Friends, thanks to the work we did together, we achieved our objective, the goal at the heart of the Paris Agreement:

    we kept 1.5 degrees alive.

    Now, none of us could have anticipated the year that followed.

    We have been buffeted by global headwinds that have tested our ability to make progress.

    Putin’s brutal and illegal war in Ukraine has precipitated multiple global crises: energy and food insecurity, inflationary pressures and spiralling debt.

    These crises have compounded existing climate vulnerabilities, and the scarring effects of the pandemic.

    And yet, despite this context, there has been some progress in implementing the commitments we delivered in Glasgow.

    Over 90 percent of the global economy is now covered by a net zero target, up from less than 30 percent when the UK took on the COP26 role.

    The biggest companies and financial institutions in the world have committed to net zero and they have done so in force,

    with a global wall of capital creating green jobs, and directing billions into the green industries of both today and tomorrow.

    Countries and companies are making tangible sectoral progress,

    from Zero Emission Vehicles to our Breakthrough Agenda,

    and are accelerating the rollout of renewable energy across the world.

    The Secretary General has been clear: our shared long-term futures do not lie in fossil fuels and I agree with him wholeheartedly.

    Every major report published this year underscores the point that progress is being made.

    Thanks to the commitments we garnered ahead of and at COP26, and indeed in our Presidency year, emissions in 2030 are expected to be around six gigatons lower.

    That is the equivalent of 12 percent of today’s global annual emissions.

    And with full implementation of all the commitments in place today, including NDCs and net zero targets, the reports suggest that we are heading to 1.7 degrees warming by the end of the century.

    Not 1.5.

    But still, progress.

    So, to those who remain sceptical about the multilateral process, and of the COP process in particular, my message is clear:

    as unwieldy and sometimes as frustrating as these processes can be, the system is delivering.

    And there are many people to thank for that.

    And certainly too many to name.

    The Prime Ministers and Presidents who have sensed the changing wind, and indeed sought instead to harness it.

    The Ministers to the miners who have recognised a just and sustainable future can only be delivered with a clean energy transition.

    The civil society organisations, youth representatives and indigenous peoples who pushed us to consider and reconsider what was possible in Glasgow, have continued to do so since.

    And, of course, the brilliant officials, the brilliant civil servants around the world, not least in the UK’s COP Unit, who have helped to deliver progress.

    And yet, despite this progress, I fully recognise the scale of the challenge still in front of us.

    Just as every report shows that we are making some progress, they are equally clear that there is so much more to be done in this critical decade.

    Friends, we are not currently on a pathway that keeps 1.5 in reach.

    And whilst I do understand that leaders around the world have faced competing priorities this year,

    we must be clear,

    as challenging as our current moment is, inaction is myopic, and can only defer climate catastrophe.

    We must find the ability to focus on more than one thing at once.

    How many more wake-up calls do world leaders actually need?

    A third of Pakistan under water.

    The worst flooding in Nigeria in a decade.

    This year, the worst drought in 500 years in Europe, in a thousand years in the US, and the worst on record in China.

    The cascading risks are also clear.

    Entire economic sectors becoming unsustainable and uninsurable,

    entire regions becoming unlivable,

    and the strain on the global movement of goods,

    and the pressure on people to relocate because of the climate crisis, becoming almost unimaginable.

    So, this conference must be about concrete action.

    And I hope that when the world leaders join us today, they will explain what their countries have achieved in the last year, and how they will go further.

    It is very simply, a matter of trust.

    Without its constituent members delivering on their commitments, and agreeing to go further, the entire system falters.

    I will do everything in my power to support our Egyptian friends.

    The UK is here to reach ambitious outcomes across the agenda, including on mitigation, on adaptation, and on loss and damage.

    And we know that we have reached a point where finance makes or breaks the programme of work that we have ahead of us.

    So whilst I would point to some of the progress shown on the $100 billion,

    I hear the criticisms, and I agree that more must be done, by governments and by the Multilateral Development Banks,

    including on doubling adaptation finance by 2025, and establishing a post-2025 goal.

    Ultimately though, I remain hopeful.

    Look back to where we were before Glasgow.

    Look back to where we were before Paris.

    Indeed, as we mark the thirtieth anniversary, look back to where we were before Rio.

    With thanks to all of you, the UK’s Presidency ends as a demonstration that progress is possible, is happening and is continuing.

    Yes, we need to accelerate that progress in the remainder of this decisive decade.

    But I believe fundamentally that we can.

    We know what we need to do to keep 1.5 degrees alive.

    We know how to do it.

    And Sameh, you and your team have our full support.

    So now friends, let’s make sure we delivery, let’s make it happen.

    Thank you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the HM Treasury

    Alok Sharma – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the HM Treasury

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Alok Sharma on 2014-03-18.

    To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what estimate he has made of the number of families eligible for tax-free childcare in Reading West constituency.

    Nicky Morgan

    The information requested is not available.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson Returning as Prime Minister

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson Returning as Prime Minister

    The comments made by Alok Sharma, the Conservative MP for Reading West, on Twitter on 21 October 2022.

    I am backing Boris Johnson – he won a mandate from the electorate in 2019.

    We need to get back to delivering on the Conservative manifesto we were elected on.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Final Speech as COP26 President

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Final Speech as COP26 President

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, at the Wilson Centre in Washington DC on 14 October 2022.

    Good morning everyone. It’s a pleasure to be here.

    I want to start by thanking Ambassador Green, and Ambassador Quinville, for the warm welcome that I’ve had here at the Wilson Center.

    I want to reflect back to nearly a year ago when the world came together, and we forged together the historic Glasgow Climate Pact.

    I have to say that what we agreed in that Pact went further than actually many people had imagined was possible.

    Thanks to the commitments made, both inside and indeed outside the negotiating rooms, by both the public and private sector, we left Glasgow with what I described at the time as a fragile win.

    The pulse of 1.5 degrees remained alive.

    And we did this against the backdrop of an increasingly fractious geopolitics, and we had nearly 200 countries come together to join forces in the face of a shared global challenge.

    Now almost a year on, it is just 23 days to COP27, the end of the UK’s COP Presidency, and the end of my time as COP President.

    And the transition to Egypt’s Presidency is coming at a profoundly challenging juncture in our current geopolitics.

    Vladimir Putin’s brutal and illegal war in Ukraine has precipitated multiple global crises: from energy and food insecurity, to inflationary and debt pressures around the world.

    These crises are absolutely compounding existing climate vulnerabilities, and of course, then the scarring effects of a once-in-a-century pandemic.

    But as serious as these crises are, we must also recognise a seismic structural shift that is underway.

    Our global political economy, built on fossil fuels for the last century, is in a state of flux.

    Concurrently, leaders and their citizens around the world are dealing with spiralling climate impacts.

    Climate catastrophes are becoming more frequent, and sadly they are becoming more ferocious.

    In recent months, as you know, an area the size of the United Kingdom has flooded in Pakistan, with death, disease and the displacement of millions of people following in the water’s wake.

    The reality is that these events are becoming increasingly connected.

    Extreme drought and heat, for example, amplify the drivers of migration, of supply chain fragility, and with significant disruption to major economic sectors, not least global grain production.

    And so I have to say this to you that this is no longer something that happens to other people, somewhere far away.

    Right here in the US, in recent weeks, Hurricane Ian has battered the East Coast.

    There are serious concerns about defending the Eastern seaboard, and the genuine possibility that entire cities will have to relocate away from the coast in our lifetimes.

    Earlier this summer, the Colorado River, which generates power for tens of millions of Americans and is a lifeblood for agriculture, was placed in an unprecedented state of emergency, due to falling water levels.

    So the future that scientists and climate activists have long warned us about, and which has frankly been a reality for some of the most climate vulnerable countries for decades, is now a reality for many millions. It is a reality for us in this room.

    And as the science continues to tell us unfortunately: the worst is yet to come.

    Catastrophe for many millions more lives and livelihoods.

    Costs soaring into the trillions.

    And entire sectors becoming stretched, and uninsurable.

    There was a report from the Australian Climate Council Study that came out this June that concluded that 1 in 25 Australian homes will become effectively uninsurable by 2030. 1 in 25.

    So friends, we are in a new world.

    And navigating this context is our defining challenge.

    And frankly, it is a challenge that we will rise to, or fall short of, in this decisive decade.

    And so today, from the vantage point of the ending of my time as COP President, I want to take stock of where we are.

    And I want to start by recognising, and indeed championing, the fact that, in some quarters, outstanding work is being done to cement the gains of the Glasgow Climate Pact, and to take us further.

    We are now part of an irreversible direction of travel.

    Yes, there is still oil, gas and coal in use and production around the world.

    But around half a decade ago, we passed a tipping point, when annual newly installed power from renewables surpassed that from coal, across the OECD.

    And estimates suggest that by the middle of this decade, renewable capacity is expected to be up 60 percent on 2020 levels.

    And leaders are across the world increasingly turning to renewables to guarantee cheaper, cleaner, and more secure power for their populations.

    We have the Inflation Reduction Act here in the US. Countries like Australia are back on the frontline of the fight against climate change.

    India has published a strengthened emissions reduction target, its 2030 Nationally Determined Contribution.

    And as you heard I was just in Kenya, whose remarkable geothermal potential is truly a vision of a cleaner future.

    Now people in my country talk about nuclear or fossil as baseload, but geothermal is doing that job in countries like Kenya.

    The plant I visited, Olkaria, was already producing 1 gigawatt of power. Kenya has the potential for ten times more geothermal power.

    And indeed if you look along that rift, there are many other countries that have potential as well.

    Now businesses are also stepping up. They are reimagining ways of working on sustainability, rather than plastics, pollution and waste.

    Just last week you will have seen that the world’s biggest reinsurer and underwriter to nearly a quarter of the global economy, Munich Re, turned its back on oil and gas.

    And civil society, represented in this room as well, is embracing the power of the collective, to make clear that it simply will not accept anything less than a net zero future.

    Now, in all of this work, we are realising the growth story of this century.

    A growth story that can deliver millions of green jobs in this decade, and economic development benefits.

    A story in which collective action and rapidly increasing scale deliver vast benefits in terms of cost and innovation.

    I mean just look at the extraordinary fall in the cost of renewables from which we are already benefiting.

    Solar costs down 80 percent since 2010.

    Wind power costs down by up to three-quarters since their peak just over ten years ago.

    And all whilst we have experienced the largest ever annual increase in the price of wholesale gas.

    And have a look at the sort of innovations that could see parked cars feeding energy back into the grid, or the electric cable cars I used to move around on my visit to Mexico City earlier this year.

    And it is a future of hope, in which our cities become more liveable, and more breathable, our energy becomes cheaper, and cleaner, and our ecosystems become more robust.

    But, despite all of this, I do find myself reflecting on three years in this role, and all the speeches and all the interventions I have given in literally every corner of the globe.

    And I am reflecting on conversations I have had here in Washington over the past few days, and they bear remarkable similarity to conversations I was having three years ago, as a fresh-faced COP President-Designate.

    And I’ve been reflecting on the G20 Climate and Environment Ministerial meetings in Indonesia, which I attended earlier this summer, where some of the world’s major emitters threatened to backslide on commitments they had made previously, in Glasgow, and indeed in Paris.

    And this all whilst the extreme weather events that I spoke about earlier, continue to batter and devastate countries and continents across the world.

    And indeed, these extreme climate events are impacting communities in the very G20 countries which were pulling back on ambition in that Climate Ministers meeting.

    So I have to say this very frankly to you friends, that there does remain a big deficit in political will.

    In that can-do spirit which is so badly needed.

    And I am left wondering what further evidence, and what further motivation, global leaders could possibly need to act.

    It is unfathomable to me that we are not doing everything in our power to respond to the inevitable structural changes that we are facing, and to prevent climate catastrophe.

    And we should be under no illusions.

    We are not yet doing everything in our power.

    So we have to ask ourselves: why are we not going further? Why are we not going faster?

    Competing priorities, and the need to do more than one thing at once

    Now, I do understand that leaders around the world have faced competing priorities this year.

    But you know, we cannot tackle any of the crises we face in isolation.

    And we cannot allow cyclical crises, as painful as they are, to distract us from the net zero transition.

    Or, as my friend Mark Carney has put it, we must not fall victim to the “tragedy of the horizon”.

    Now that unfortunately happened amidst the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, just a year after hundreds of IPCC contributors were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And frankly many decided climate action could wait for the future.

    And so we lost critical momentum as a result.

    We must find the ability to focus on more than one thing at once.

    And I am reminded, when I was the UK’s Business and Energy Secretary.

    My team and I worked to support businesses through the darkest and most challenging moments of the pandemic.

    At the same time, the UK’s Vaccine Taskforce sat in my government department, and I chaired our Ministerial Investment Panel, deciding which vaccines to back.

    So, working around the clock for months, and supported by a team of outstanding civil servants, we delivered the UK’s COVID vaccine portfolio.

    And it was at the same time in that same year in my department we brought forward the UK’s ambitious 2030 Nationally Determined Contribution.

    So the point I am making is that it is possible to take on multiple challenges, and to succeed, even in the most challenging times.

    And indeed, as many climate vulnerable countries have been recognising for some time, we no longer have the luxury of choice. We have to try and do this simultaneously.

    But I have to say I think we also have to ask ourselves some more fundamental questions.

    We are approaching the 27th iteration of the United Nations Conference on Climate Change. The COPs.

    Over a quarter-of-a-century of work.

    I am at the end of my own three-year journey in this process.

    So I’m going to be frank.

    I think we do have to question whether all our current international institutions have fully internalised the grave urgency of our climate situation.

    And whether we are truly capable of delivering net zero, by the middle of this century.

    So, is one of our fundamental drawbacks that we are coming up against the limits of our existing structures?

    Now Prime Minister Mia Mottley, of Barbados, who is one of the world’s most powerful climate voices,

    and whose country is very much on the frontline of this crisis, set out her views on this particular question at the United Nations General Assembly last month.

    Her “Bridgetown Agenda” is a compelling call for an overhaul of our global financial architecture.

    And actually I agree with much of what she has set out.

    Institutions, like the World Bank, as admirable as their founding intentions are, were not set up with the purpose of tackling an existential climate crisis.

    Today, climate must be at the heart of everything that we do.

    The world cannot afford for such institutions to be cautious in how their considerable resources are deployed to tackle the climate crisis.

    That, I think, is a matter of social justice as well as environmental security.

    And yes, we also have to talk seriously about dealing with the debt crisis, in order to effectively tackle the climate crisis.

    As a climate friend said to me last week, the road to an ambitious outcome in Sharm-el-Sheikh, and indeed to all forthcoming COPs, will pass through this city, it will pass through Washington.

    And I know the sentiment of Prime Minister Mottley’s agenda commands much support.

    Secretary Yellen has also spoken, incredibly powerfully, on the issue of MDB reform last week.

    I was at Chatham House in London a couple of weeks ago, with some of the world’s biggest businesses, discussing the course to a 1.5-degree world.

    And they too were talking about the world order being ripe for a “Bretton Woods II” moment.

    So friends, the world is recognising that we cannot tackle the defining challenge of this century, with institutions that were defined by the last.

    We have to incentivise every aspect of the international system to recognise the systemic risk of climate change, and to make managing it effectively a central task.

    Whether that’s multilateral development banks or the private sector.

    Central banks or investment banks.

    Regulators or credit rating agencies.

    Finance ministries or philanthropies.

    There is frankly no logical reason why every single one of those institutions should not be adapting, to making tackling the climate crisis a fundamental part of their overall purpose.

    And ultimately, this is going to be absolutely critical to our efforts to deliver public, private and multilateral finance, including concessional finance, which is so vitally important, at magnitudes that are far, far greater than we are currently achieving, and which we frankly need.

    It will be critical to ensuring the multilateral development banks and the international financial institutions in particular show a willingness to innovate, and to stretch their balance sheets.

    The G20’s Capital Adequacy Review suggests ways in which they can do that, and many of us are expecting an ambitious response to that review.

    And it’s all going to be critical to ensuring the major philanthropies ramp up their contributions, particularly in areas of higher risk or lower return.

    Now of course, whilst finance is absolutely central, our political institutions, whether that is the COP process, the G7, the G20, the G77, they also all have a role to play.

    This is particularly true as we look for a genuinely effective multilateral approach to carbon pricing.

    Right now, credible estimates suggest less than four percent of global emissions are currently covered by a direct carbon price at, or indeed above, the level we would need to limit warming to 2 degrees or less.

    So that point, addressing one of the great market challenges of our time, is of course of particular importance.

    So friends, this programme of work is the only way we will fully deliver on the promises made in Glasgow, and in Paris before that.

    And yes, absolutely it is an overwhelming agenda of work.

    But it is commensurate with both the scale of the challenge, and the scale of the environmental and economic opportunity.

    And, as I reflect on the legacy of COP26, and the UK’s Presidency, I know that the world can rise to the challenge.

    Now of course, it will soon be time for our friends in Egypt to pick up the baton.

    COP is a process, and I want COP27 to build on the success of COP26, just as COP26 built on COP25, and COP24 before that.

    And yes there is much work to be done.

    At COP27, there will need to be serious conversations on mitigation.

    Yes, we have seen 24 new or enhanced Nationally Determined Contributions this year, including from the UK.

    But that is not enough.

    All Parties agreed in Glasgow to step forward on this issue by the end of this year.

    And as climate impacts spiral, loss and damage will of course again be increasingly part of the conversation.

    A conversation that should go even further than our collective progress at COP26.

    And there should be a new agenda item to consider how best to improve the global response, through funding and wider support, aligned with the Glasgow Dialogue.

    And countries must get access to the technical help they need through fully operationalising the Santiago Network.

    And we must also continue to set out precisely how the billions are going to be turned into the trillions, to go into climate-resilient infrastructure and to support a clean energy transition across the world.

    And so we will continue to press on with our Just Energy Transition Partnerships, the first of which, for South Africa, we launched at COP26.

    Now each of those partnerships will take on a different, country-specific shape, but they are, and will remain, a key legacy of COP26.

    So, with this work ahead, I hope all Parties come to Egypt with the same spirit of urgency, of collaboration and indeed compromise, that underpinned our success in Glasgow.

    I will be there as the UK’s negotiating minister.

    And I can tell you that we will certainly be stepping forward.

    So with that, friends, as we look ahead to COP27, and I look to the end of my COP Presidency, I want to end on a hopeful note.

    The last three years have been a unique privilege.

    I have been inspired by the urgency and the ambition I have felt in rooms like this one, around the world.

    And I am certain that, if we can align all of the work that I have seen and that I have talked about today, and adapt the systems that underpin it, the 21st century will not just be the century we pulled the world back from the precipice of climate catastrophe, it will be the century we unlocked a just and sustainable path to prosperity for billions of people around the world.

    Frankly what greater motivation could we need?

    Thank you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech to the Columbia University World Leaders Forum

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech to the Columbia University World Leaders Forum

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the COP27 President, on 22 September 2022.

    Good morning everyone.

    And can I first start by thanking President Bollinger and Alex for the very warm welcome I’ve had today.

    I am now into the final weeks of my time as President of the 26th United Nations Conference on Climate Change, or COP26.

    It has been a near-three year journey in the thick of international climate politics and the maelstrom of wider geopolitics.

    And it remains an absolute privilege to have opportunities like this one,

    to speak as part of your World Leaders Forum,

    and to celebrate Columbia’s pioneering climate school, the first of its kind in the United States.

    Your school has had an auspicious start.

    Not least with your roundtable, at COP26, with President Obama.

    I understand the former President, and of course Columbia alumnus, noted the energy, and remarkable potential, of participating students.

    That is coming from a man who knows what it means to mobilise, and to inspire action.

    I have felt that same force when I’ve met youth climate activists around the world over the past few years.

    And I do understand the anger of young people.

    It is your future most at risk.

    You and your generation will have to live with the consequences of the actions, or inaction, of current world leaders.

    I have been directly challenged by young people on the need to push the world to go a lot faster to tackle global warming.

    I convened an international meeting for ministers, on implementing the Glasgow Climate Pact, in Copenhagen in May. We saw youth protesters make their feelings and frustrations plain.

    Every Minister saw that as they came into the meeting.

    And at the end of the meeting, I encouraged Ministers to leave the meeting with the voices of those young people ringing in their ears.

    Hearing those voices every time they made government decisions affecting the future of the planet.

    And that brings me to the focus of my address.

    You all know this, but it sometimes needs to be repeated.

    We are facing a climate crisis.

    The scientific evidence is absolutely clear, it’s unequivocal.

    We know that we are running out of time to avert catastrophe.

    The reality is that if we do not bend the curve of global warming downwards, in this decisive decade – eight and a half years left – we will go beyond the limits of our ability to adapt.

    Around the world, we are already seeing what that future could look like.

    And that future is absolutely terrifying.

    For some people across the world, it is here right now.

    In recent weeks, an area the size of the United Kingdom has been flooded in Pakistan.

    A monster monsoon bringing in its wake death, destruction and displacement of millions of people.

    Hurricane Fiona has barrelled through the Caribbean.

    This summer we have seen the US experience its worst drought in over a thousand years years.

    Europe has experienced its worst drought in 500 years.

    And China its worst ever drought, as record temperatures have dried up key parts of the Yangtze River.

    I could go on.

    You will all have examples as well.

    I was with the new UNFCCC Executive Secretary Simon Stiell earlier this week, and he made the point that the reality of these events is a cycle of disaster, rebuild, disaster, rebuild, for millions of people around the world.

    We need to do better.

    And we also know that the increasing frequency, and ferocity, of these extreme weather events is set to worsen.

    So, in the context of the pressing need for more urgent climate action,

    I want to talk about my role, and the COP Presidency.

    Our drive to implement the outcomes of the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    The ability of global coalitions of the willing, including the United States, to deliver change.

    And, most importantly, the capacity of the young climate leaders in the room this morning to hold governments and businesses to account.

    The primary role of the COP President is to oversee a COP Summit, deliver a negotiated outcome, and then drive its implementation in the post-summit Presidency year.

    I am proud that, when the world came to Glasgow last November, the UK Presidency shepherded nearly 200 countries to forge the historic Glasgow Climate Pact.

    But the outcome of that Pact was not an inevitability.

    There was huge scepticism in the international community at the start of the UK Presidency about whether we really could make progress on the road to, and at Glasgow.

    And personally, COP26 was my very first COP – I had never been to one before.

    But because of that, very early on, I sought the advice of past COP Presidents.

    And from my very first day as COP President Designate, I sought to meet world leaders, ministers, chief executives, youth and civil society groups, and communities on the front line of climate change, around the world.

    This was all about ensuring an open and neutral Presidency.

    Underpinned by the principles of transparency, inclusivity, consistency of message and trust,

    And trust, I have to say to you, is an incredibly fragile commodity in climate negotiations.

    I wanted to ensure that those four principles would be the foundation on which we built an ambitious COP26 outcome.

    But, having spent two years talking to governments around the world, trying to craft the key elements of the Glasgow Climate Pact, we almost fell short in the final hours of COP26.

    We had an opacity in those one-minute-to-midnight negotiations.

    China and India raised objections to key language on coal and fossil fuel subsidies.

    We went behind the stage to negotiate.

    As we negotiated, I wrote out word-by-word the minimum changes which China and India could accept.

    I can tell you it was fraught.

    I still have the marked up piece of A4 paper at home on which we wrote out the text.

    For me, that is an eternal reminder that things could have turned out very differently.

    Because there were critical moments in those final hours when I was really concerned that a global deal, effectively two years in gestation, was about to collapse.

    For anyone watching, you will have seen me crossing the plenary floor, showing the proposed revised text to the Chairs of the UNFCCC negotiating groups.

    Yes, I did become emotional, when I put the final text to the floor.

    I was disappointed that, after such effort to run a transparent Presidency, the COP26 negotiating process was ending in hushed and rushed conversations.

    But I was, and continue to be, incredibly proud of what my UK COP Presidency team achieved in delivering the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    Our overall goal, right from the start, was to garner enough commitments to ensure that we were keeping alive the prospect of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels.

    And we achieved that goal.

    Prior to the Paris Agreement, scientists were telling us that the world was on course for 4 degrees of global warming by the end of the century.

    Post-Paris it was 3 degrees.

    After Glasgow, we were able to say with credibility that we had kept 1.5 alive.

    And whilst 1.5 degrees was our North Star, we made critical progress on adaptation, on finance, on loss and damage, on empowerment, and on so many other issues.

    In fact the Chair of the Climate Vulnerables Forum recognised the steps we had taken “on all the priorities of the most climate threatened nations”.

    Yes, we achieved a Pact.

    But frankly, the Pact is nothing but words on a page.

    The pulse of 1.5 will remain weak until the Pact, every element of it, is implemented in full.

    And we have to be frank that implementation is very challenging.

    First, we did all sign up to an ambitious programme of work.

    And second, the world has changed markedly since last November, overshadowed by the Putin regime’s brutal and illegal war in Ukraine.

    Countries around the world are facing perilous economic and geopolitical conditions, and threats to energy security.

    We are grappling with soaring inflation, rising debt, and food insecurity.

    For many, climate has not been front of mind.

    But I do truly believe there remains cause for hope.

    I see climate leaders doing remarkable work.

    Take for example the Prime Minister of Viet Nam, who I saw again last month.

    He is utterly relentless in driving his country’s economic transformation, based on clean energy.

    And we as a G7 nation, and other developed nations, are supporting that effort with Viet Nam’s Just Energy Transition Partnership, which can be the gold standard for sustainable economic growth for developing countries around the world.

    Businesses and financial institutions are radically reimagining what it means to be a responsible, 21st century company.

    Bill Gates, who I spent time with earlier this week, rightly noted that COP26 was the COP where businesses came in force.

    And you will have seen, just last week, the founder of Patagonia, dedicating his company’s fortune to the climate cause.

    Now, where are we in this process?

    We will get a clearer sense that when the UNFCCC publishes its latest Synthesis Report.

    The deadline for countries to make submissions on their 2030 emissions reduction targets is tomorrow.

    I am sure that the report will make clear that the job is far from done.

    I was in Indonesia earlier this month at the G20 Climate, Energy and Environment Ministers Meeting.

    Unbelievably, our negotiators had to fight to simply restate commitments we have all previously signed up to.

    Inexplicably, there were debates about the unequivocal science of the IPCC reports.

    Some countries sought to push against language from the Glasgow Climate Pact, agreed just ten months ago, and the foundational Paris Agreement, on which that Pact is built.

    And there was even rowing back on the collective agreement that was reached by G20 leaders last year to lead on climate action.

    So my message here in New York this week has been frank.

    The Glasgow and Paris language must be the baseline of our ambition.

    We cannot retreat from that.

    And this is a critical moment to redouble our efforts, resist backsliding, and ultimately go further, and faster.

    Collectively, the world’s richest countries, and the biggest emitters, have looked too many climate vulnerable countries and communities in the eyes,

    and promised too much action,

    to step back now.

    To do so would be a betrayal.

    And the United States is a key player in all of these discussions.

    It is the second biggest emitter, and the largest by capita.

    The US therefore has a responsibility to lead on climate action.

    In all my travels as COP President, and all my time speaking with the world’s most vulnerable countries and communities, that is a firmly held view.

    They want to continue to see the US leading.

    Thankfully, the US also has unparalleled resources, and expertise.

    That was evident, as we all watched, with a mixture of hope and trepidation, the machinations surrounding the Build Back Better Bill,

    and the ultimate passage of the Inflation Reduction Act,

    the largest climate spending package in US history.

    I congratulate President Biden, and my very good friend John Kerry for their roles in securing that historic achievement.

    So now, I urge the Senate to now press home the advantage.

    Match the domestic ambition with international action.

    In particular, deliver the billions of international climate finance being asked of Congress for the coming years.

    Finance, my friends, is a key ask of climate vulnerable countries and we must all, including the United States, deliver on our promises.

    I want to turn now specifically to the role of the students in the room.

    I know there is much talk of the midterms right now, and of the partisan nature of climate policy at federal level.

    In fact because of this,

    I encourage you to run towards the heart of the climate debate, on both sides of the aisle, at national and subnational level.

    Of course I know that many of you will be considering the 30-minute hop on the 1 train, to Wall Street.

    That work will be pivotal too.

    All of the climate action I have talked about today, all the promises that have been made, has one thing in common: it requires us to turn the billions currently flowing in climate finance, into trillions.

    We need advocates like you in the boardrooms and on trading floors here in New York, and around the world.

    And there are similarly catalytic roles in civil society, particularly recognising climate justice is completely interlinked with economic and social justice for so many people around the world.

    In all of this work, I am heartened to know that you will be joined by colleagues from the increasing number of climate and sustainability schools,

    in the US and around the world.

    From the students who hosted me just up the coast at Tufts in March, to those I met last month at Can Tho University, in the Mekong Delta of Viet Nam.

    I had the privilege of attending on Monday, the State Funeral of our Late Monarch, Her Majesty the Queen.

    In a moment of quiet reflection in Westminster Abbey, I thought back to Her Majesty’s words, delivered to world leaders attending COP26.

    She said:

    “It is the hope of many that the legacy of this summit – written in the history books yet to be printed – will describe you as the leaders who did not pass up the opportunity; and that you answered the call of those future generations.”

    That history is still to be written.

    And I hope that the leaders of today, in my own country, in the United States, and across the world will heed the late Queen’s wise words.

    To those of you setting out on your own leadership journeys.

    Make them count.

    And whilst my formal role ends at COP27, I will be there with you, continuing to champion the cause of climate action, which is so vital.

    Thank you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Comments on COP27

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Comments on COP27

    The comments made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, on 20 September 2022.

    Since last November when we met at COP26, the world has faced multiple global crises, precipitated by Vladimir Putin’s illegal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, which need immediate attention.

    However at the same time the chronic threat of climate change has worsened with the devastating floods in Pakistan, which have left a third of the country underwater, one terrible example of our changing climate.

    Therefore at this critical juncture less than two months before COP27, and just days ahead of the UNFCCC Synthesis Report deadline, it is more important than ever that all countries deliver on the commitments we made, collectively, in the Glasgow Climate Pact.