Tag: Boris Johnson

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on COP26

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on COP26

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 15 November 2021.

    Before I begin today’s statement, I would like to say a few words about the sickening attack that took place yesterday morning outside Liverpool Women’s Hospital. On behalf of the whole House, I want to pay tribute to the swift and professional response by the extraordinary men and women of the emergency services, who, once again, showed themselves to be the very best among us.

    The Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre has today raised the nationwide threat level from substantial to severe, meaning that an attack is highly likely. The police are keeping both myself and the Home Secretary informed on developments and we will, in turn, keep the House updated on the investigation as it continues.

    And now, Madam Deputy Speaker, with your permission I should like to make a statement on the United Nations Climate Change Conference, better known as COP26, which took place in the magnificent city of Glasgow over the past two weeks. It was the biggest political gathering of any kind ever held in the United Kingdom. One hundred and ninety four countries were represented. We had around 120 heads of state and heads of government, 38,000 accredited delegates, and countless tens of thousands more in the streets, parks and venues outside.

    It was a summit that many people predicted would fail, and a summit, I fear, that some quietly wanted to fail. Yet it was a summit that proved the doubters and the cynics wrong, because COP26 succeeded not just in keeping 1.5 alive, but in doing something that no UN climate conference has ever done before by uniting the world in calling time on coal. In 25 previous COPs, all the way back to Berlin in 1995, not one delivered a mandate to remove so much as a single lump of coal from one power station boiler. For decades, tackling the single biggest cause of carbon emissions proved as challenging as eating the proverbial elephant—it was just so big that nobody knew quite where to start. In Glasgow, we took the first bite. We have secured a global commitment to phasing down coal. As John Kerry pointed out, we cannot phase out coal without first phasing it down, as we transition to other cleaner energy sources. We also have, for the first time, a worldwide recognition that we will not get climate change under control as long as our power stations are consuming vast quantities of the sedimentary super-polluter that is coal. That alone is a great achievement, but we have not just signalled the beginning of the end for coal; we have ticked our boxes on cars, cash and trees as well.

    The companies that build a quarter of the world’s automobiles have agreed to stop building carbon emission vehicles by 2035, and cities from São Paulo to Seattle have pledged to ban them from their streets. We have pioneered a whole new model—an intellectual breakthrough —that sees billions in climate finance, development bank investment and so forth being used to trigger trillions from the private sector to drive the big decarbonisation programmes in countries such as South Africa. And we have done something that absolutely none of the commentators saw coming, by building a coalition of more than 130 countries to protect up to 90% of our forests around the world—those great natural soakers of carbon.

    None of this was a happy accident or inevitability. The fact that we were there at all, in the face of a global pandemic, is in itself the result of a vast and complex effort involving countless moving parts. Right until the very end, there was the real prospect that no agreement would be reached. What has been achieved has only come about thanks to month after month of concerted British diplomacy—the countless meetings; the innumerable phone calls; the banging of heads at the United Nations General Assembly, the Petersberg dialogue, President Biden’s climate summit, the Security Council, the G7 and the G20—and the setting of several examples by the UK, because again and again the task of our negotiators was made easier by the fact that the UK was not asking anyone to do anything that we are not doing ourselves.

    We have slashed our use of coal so much that our last two coal-fired power stations will go offline for good in 2024. We have more than doubled our climate finance, providing vital support for poor and vulnerable nations around the world. We have made a legally binding commitment to reach net zero—the first major economy to do so. We have set a date at which hydrocarbon internal combustion engines will reach the end of the road. We have shown the world that it is possible to grow an economy while cutting carbon, creating markets for clean technology, and delivering new green jobs that reduce emissions and increase prosperity.

    Every one of those achievements was not just great news for our country and our planet, but another arrow in the quiver of our fantastic team in Glasgow—a team led by the COP26 President, my right hon. Friend the Member for Reading West (Alok Sharma). From the moment that he picked up the COP reins, he has been absolutely tireless in his efforts to secure the change that we need. Although I am pretty sure that what he really needs now is a well-earned break, I do not think that any of us here is going to be able to hold him back as he sets off pushing countries to go further still, and ensuring that the promises made in Glasgow are delivered and not diluted.

    But success has many parents, so I want to say a huge thank you to the officials—in our own COP unit, in Downing Street and across Government, in UK embassies around the world and at the United Nations—who pulled out all the stops to make the event work and to shepherd through the agreements that have been reached. I also thank everybody on the ground at the Scottish Event Campus in Glasgow—security, catering, transport, the relentlessly cheery volunteers, the police from across the whole country who kept everybody safe from harm, the public health authorities who kept us safe from covid—and everyone in the Scottish Government. Above all, I want to say a big, big thank you to the people of Glasgow, who had to put up with so much disruption in their city and who welcomed the world all the same. I say to them: we could not have done it without you.

    Is there still more to do? Well, of course there is. I am not for one moment suggesting that we can safely close the book on climate change. In fact, I can think of nothing more dangerous than patting ourselves on the back and telling ourselves that the job is done—because this job will not be complete until the whole world has not only set off on the goal to reach net zero but arrived at that destination: a goal that, even with the best of intentions from all actors, cannot be achieved overnight. While COP26 has filled me with optimism about our ability to get there, I cannot now claim to be certain that we will, because we have seen some countries that really should know better dragging their heels on their Paris commitments. But if—and it is still a massive if—they make good on their pledges, then I believe that Glasgow will be remembered as the place where we secured a historic agreement and the world began to turn the tide. Before Paris, we were on course for 4° of warming. After Paris, that number fell to a still catastrophically dangerous 3°. This afternoon, after the Glasgow climate pact, it stands close to 2°. It is still too high—the numbers are still too hot, the warming still excessive—but it is closer than we have ever been to the relative safety of 1.5°, and now we have an all-new roadmap to help us get there.

    Aristotle taught us that virtue comes not from reasoning and instruction but from habit and from practice. So the success of the Glasgow climate pact lies not just in the promises but in the move that the whole world has now made from setting abstract targets to adopting the nuts-and-bolts programme of work to meet those targets and to reduce CO2 emissions. We are now talking about the how rather than the what, and getting into a habit of cutting CO2 that is catching on not just with Governments and businesses but with billions of people around the world. It is for that reason that I believe that COP26 in Glasgow has been a success and that 1.5° is still alive. That is something I believe that every person in our United Kingdom can and should take immense pride in, and I commend this statement to the House.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Letter to Speaker of the House of Commons on Parliamentary Standards

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Letter to Speaker of the House of Commons on Parliamentary Standards

    The letter sent by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, to Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, on 16 November 2021.

    Text of letter (in .pdf format)

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on Remembrance Sunday

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on Remembrance Sunday

    The comments made by Boris Johnson on 14 November 2021.

    Today we come together to remember those who sacrificed everything in service of our country, in the First World War and every conflict since, including recently in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    It’s a sacred ceremony that has endured for more than a century because we know the unpayable debt we owe those brave servicemen and women.

    We know that for our tomorrow they gave their today. And we know that here at home and around the world, thousands of men and women in uniform still stand ready to defend our unity and our way of life, our values, and at a cost few among us would be willing to pay.

    Today we come together. We wear our poppies with pride and stand as a nation in two minutes of silent tribute.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Press Conference at COP26

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Press Conference at COP26

    The press conference held in Glasgow on 10 November 2021.

    Before heading back to London last week, I warned of the need to guard against false optimism and to not allow ourselves to think that the progress we need would be easy.

    And today, having spoken with the Secretary-General, and having met negotiating teams, heads of delegations and others here at COP, it’s clear that after the surge of really positive, game-changing announcements last week on methane, on finance, on forests in particular, we are now firmly in the hard yards, the nuts and bolts of international climate diplomacy.

    And the negotiations are getting tough.

    And with just a few days remaining, there is still a huge amount to do.

    We’ve made a difference, we hope, for our planet and our people.

    We’ve moved the ball a long way down the pitch.

    But now we’re stuck in a bit of a rolling maul to mix my football and rugby metaphors.

    The line is in sight, but if we’re going to get there, we need a determined push to get us there.

    We need to be more ambitious with better, more credible plans for implementation.

    We have to bridge the gap between where we are and where we need to be if we’re going to cut emissions in half by 2030.

    And we need to pull out all the stops if we’re going to do what we came here to do and that’s keep 1.5 alive and make Paris the success the world needs it to be.

    Because while that 2016 agreement was a significant moment in the fight against climate change, it was ultimately a pledge of action still to come.

    And it is very frustrating to see countries that have spent six years conspicuously patting themselves on the back for signing that promissory note in Paris quietly edging towards default now that vulnerable nations and future generations are demanding payment here in Glasgow.

    And there really is no excuse because we know what is at stake here.

    We’ve been hearing it all week.

    We heard it from the President of Palau, Surangel Whipps Jr, who told me he spent five days travelling seven and a half thousand miles across nine time zones to make sure the voice of his people was heard.

    The least we can do is pay attention when he says that if the big economies don’t do more we “might as well bomb” his islands.

    We heard it from Simon Kofe, from the government of Tuvalu, who spoke to us not from a podium in a cosy conference room but knee-deep in a steadily rising Pacific Ocean.

    And we heard it from Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados who so moved the opening ceremony when she warned that we are digging our own graves and asked when are the leaders finally going to lead.

    And if you stood and applauded her, then you cannot now sit on your hands as the world asks you to act.

    Because the world knows the mess our planet is in.

    The world has heard leaders from every country, every continent stand here and acknowledge the need for action.

    And the world will find it absolutely incomprehensible if we fail to deliver that.

    The backlash from our people will be immense and it will be long-lasting.

    And frankly, we will deserve their criticism and opprobrium.

    Because we know what needs to be done.

    We agree on what needs to be done.

    We just need the courage to get on and do it.

    So this is the time for everyone to come together and show the determination needed to power on through the blockages.

    To look at the science with dispassionate eyes and think about how we can compromise, how we can be flexible to meet the needs of the planet.

    And for world leaders who are back in their capitals to pick up the phone to their teams here and give them the negotiating margin, give them the space they need in which to manoeuvre so we can get this done.

    Here in Glasgow, the world is closer than it has ever been to signalling the beginning of the end of anthropogenic climate change.

    It’s the greatest gift we can possibly bestow on our children and grandchildren and generations unborn.

    It’s now within reach, at COP26 in these final days, we just need to reach out together and grasp it.

    And so my question for my fellow world leaders this afternoon as we enter the last hours of COP is will you help us do that?

    Will you help us grasp that opportunity or will you stand in the way?

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on COP26 Conclusions

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Comments on COP26 Conclusions

    The comments made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 10 November 2021.

    Negotiating teams are doing the hard yards in these final days of COP26 to turn promises into action on climate change.

    There’s still much to do. Today I’ll be meeting with ministers and negotiators to hear about where progress has been made and where the gaps must be bridged.

    This is bigger than any one country and it is time for nations to put aside differences and come together for our planet and our people.

    We need to pull out all the stops if we’re going to keep 1.5C within our grasp.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on the G20 and COP26 World Leaders Summit

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on the G20 and COP26 World Leaders Summit

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 3 November 2021.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I will make a statement about the G20 summit in Rome and update the House on COP26 in Glasgow.

    Almost 30 years ago, the world acknowledged the gathering danger of climate change and agreed to do what would once have been inconceivable: to regulate the atmosphere of the planet itself by curbing greenhouse gas emissions. One declaration succeeded another until, in Paris in 2015, we all agreed to seek to restrain the rise in world temperatures to 1.5° C.

    Now, after all the targets and promises, and after yet more warnings from our scientists about the peril staring us in the face, we come to the reckoning. This is the moment when we must turn words into action. If we fail, Paris will have failed, and every summit going back to Rio de Janeiro in 1992 will have failed, because we will have allowed our shared aim of 1.5° to escape our grasp.

    Even half a degree of extra warming would have tragic consequences. If global temperatures were to rise by 2°, our scientists forecast that we will lose virtually all the world’s coral reefs. The Great Barrier Reef and countless other living marvels would dissolve into an ever warmer and ever more acidic ocean, returning the terrible verdict that human beings lacked the will to preserve the wonders of the natural world.

    In the end, it is a question of will. We have the technology to do what is necessary; all that remains in question is our resolve. The G20 summit convened by our Italian friends and COP26 partner last weekend provided encouraging evidence that the political will exists, which is vital for the simple reason that the G20 accounts for 80% of the world economy and 75% of greenhouse gas emissions. Britain was the first G20 nation to promise in law to wipe out our contribution to climate change by achieving net zero; as recently as 2019, only one other member had made a comparable pledge.

    Today, 18 countries in the G20 have made specific commitments to achieve net zero and in the Rome declaration last Sunday every member acknowledged

    “the key relevance of achieving global net zero greenhouse gas emissions or carbon neutrality by or around mid-century”.

    To that end, the G20, including China, agreed to stop financing new international unabated coal projects by the end of this year—a vital step towards consigning coal to history—and every member repeated their commitment to the Paris target of 1.5°.

    In a spirit of co-operation, the summit reached other important agreements. The G20 will levy a minimum corporation tax rate of 15%, ensuring that multinational companies make a fair contribution wherever they operate. Over 130 countries and jurisdictions have now joined the arrangement, showing what we can achieve together when the will exists.

    The G20 adopted a target of vaccinating 70% of the world’s population against covid by the middle of next year, and the UK is on track to provide 100 million doses to that effort. By the end of the year, we will have donated over 30 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, and at least another 20 million will follow next year along with all 20 million doses of the Janssen vaccine ordered by the Government. The G20 also resolved to work together to ease the supply chain disruptions that have affected every member as demand recovers and the world economy gets back on its feet. I pay tribute to Prime Minister Mario Draghi for his expert handling of the summit.

    But everyone will accept that far more needs to be done to spare humanity from catastrophic climate change. In the meantime, global warming is already contributing to droughts, brushfires and hurricanes, summoning an awful vision of what lies ahead if we fail to act in the time that remains. So the biggest summit that the United Kingdom has ever hosted is now under way in Glasgow, bringing together 120 world leaders with the aim of translating aspirations into action to keep the ambition of 1.5° alive. I am grateful to Glasgow City Council, Police Scotland, police across the whole of the UK and our public health bodies for making the occasion possible and for all their hard work. For millions across the world, the outcome is literally a matter of life or death. For some island states in the Pacific and the Caribbean, it is a question of national survival.

    The negotiations in Glasgow have almost two weeks to run, but we can take heart from what has been achieved so far. Nations that together comprise 90% of the world economy are now committed to net zero, up from 30% when the UK took over the reins of COP. Yesterday alone, the United States and over 100 other countries agreed to cut their emissions of methane—one of the most destructive greenhouse gases—by 30% by 2030, and 122 countries with over 85% of the world’s forests agreed to end and reverse deforestation by the same deadline, backed by the greatest ever commitment of public funds to the cause. I hope that will trigger even more from the private sector.

    India has agreed to transform her energy system to derive half her power from renewable sources, keeping a billion tonnes of carbon out of the atmosphere. The UK has doubled our commitment to international climate finance to £11.6 billion, and we will contribute another £1 billion if the economy grows as is forecast. We have launched our clean green initiative, which will help the developing world to build new infrastructure in an environmentally friendly way, and we will invest £3 billion of public money to unlock billions more from the private sector.

    The UK has asked the world for action on coal, cars, cash and trees, and we have begun to make substantial, palpable progress on three out of the four, but the negotiations in Glasgow have a long way to go and far more must be done. Whether we can summon the collective wisdom and will to save ourselves from an avoidable disaster still hangs in the balance. We will press on with the hard work until the last hour.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Speech at COP26 Build Back Better Meeting

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Speech at COP26 Build Back Better Meeting

    The speech made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 2 November 2021.

    Let me thank President Biden and President von der Leyen for hosting this meeting and you’re absolutely right that we began this idea with the Build Back Better partnership in Carbis Bay.

    To keep 1.5 degrees in sight, to reach global net zero

    and to protect vulnerable countries from the impacts of climate change

    requires the development of new clean and green infrastructure.

    And this presents a huge opportunity to turn our struggle against climate change into a global mission for jobs and growth.

    In the UK, through our net zero strategy, we’re pioneering a green industrial revolution,

    with public investment leveraging billions of pounds of private funding into whole new industries

    from offshore wind to carbon capture and storage

    allowing us in the UK to level up our whole country with thousands of new green jobs.

    And by partnering with developing and emerging economies to invest in climate-smart infrastructure,

    and meeting our $100 billion climate finance commitment

    we can go on to unlock trillions, when it’s tens of trillions or hundreds of trillions as Mark Carney would say, of private finance,

    to do something similar worldwide.

    So our pursuit of global net zero can drive global levelling up,

    helping developing economies fast track their way to a more prosperous, clean and green future.

    So the UK wholeheartedly supports the principles that President Biden has set out,

    working in partnership to create the highest standards of climate-resilient infrastructure,

    rooted in our shared democratic values of transparency, inclusivity and collaboration,

    and led by the host countries, responding to their needs.

    And I welcome the work of Mark Carney and others on creating what we call “country platforms” to help connect pipelines of green infrastructure projects with the vast private capital looking to invest in net zero.

    The UK is proud to contribute to these efforts today with our Clean Green Initiative.

    By taking our green industrial revolution global,

    we’re investing over £3 billion,

    and mobilising a similar amount of private finance

    to support technologies like drought-resistant agriculture where investors have been reluctant to take on the risks alone.

    We’re investing in green bonds for renewable energy in Vietnam,

    and solar power in Burkina Faso, Pakistan, Nepal and Chad.

    We’re offering guarantees to the World Bank and the African Development Bank,

    to unlock up to £2.2bn billion of new finance for green infrastructure across India and Africa.

    And we’re working with President Ramaphosa to deliver his ambitious vision for faster, greener growth,

    helping to lead an $8.5 billion partnership to decarbonise what is currently the most carbon intensive energy system in the world,

    and by choking off international finance for coal.

    I look forward to working with all of you as we take forward these investments in clean, green infrastructure

    And this is like one of those moments in the story of humanity when everybody is making the same intellectual breakthrough at the same time in seeing the way forward, in leveraging in private finance – we have the Global Gateway, we have the One Planet Initiative, we have our Clean Green Initiative, we have Build Back Better World, we have GFANZ- everybody is now on the same thing, it’s time to bring it all together so this can also become the moment we get real on levelling up the world,

    securing a cleaner, greener and more prosperous future for everyone.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on UK and French Fishing Dispute

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Statement on UK and French Fishing Dispute

    A statement issued on behalf of Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 1 November 2021.

    We welcome the French Government’s announcement that they will not go ahead with implementing their proposed measures as planned tomorrow. The UK has set out its position clearly on these measures in recent days.

    As we have said consistently, we are ready to continue intensive discussions on fisheries, including considering any new evidence to support the remaining licence applications.

    We welcome France’s acknowledgement that in-depth discussions are needed to resolve the range of difficulties in the UK/EU relationship. Lord Frost has accepted Clement Beaune’s invitation and looks forward to the discussions in Paris on Thursday.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Speech at the COP26 Action and Solidarity Session

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Speech at the COP26 Action and Solidarity Session

    The speech made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 1 November 2021 at the SEC Conference Centre in Glasgow.

    Thank you everybody and welcome to this session on action and solidarity.

    I’m going to kick off with giving you my perspective because this is about all of us taking the concrete steps that will actually help the countries around the world that need it most.

    When it comes to tackling climate change, words without action, without deeds are absolutely pointless.

    And our record on deeds so far is not exactly stellar – we had a brilliant speech from Mia Mottley of Barbados making the point.

    Back in Paris, richer nations all signed the paper saying that by 2020 we’d be raising $100 billion of climate finance each year and there was no ambiguity, no wiggle room in that.

    But that deadline has come and gone and yet it’s going to be 2023 before we hit the target.

    So, that was one of our very first post-Paris tests and we’ve collectively flunked it.

    But of course getting there eventually is better than not getting there at all.

    But if we are late again with the 1.5 or with the rest of the 1.5c challenge then we will have left it far too late.

    And as anybody who was in that session at UNGA will remember, the testimony is of those that are on the front line, the countries that face cataclysmic inundations, the countries that face the hurricanes, they really will not forgive us.

    They are looking at what’s happening at this COP, and we need to think about them and take action now to prevent loss and damage on a truly catastrophic scale. We’ve got to take action on their behalf.

    So I’ve got to say to everybody who belongs to one of the richer and more developed nations, that as the host country for COP26 and with Alok on my right as the President of COP26…

    …If I’m forced to choose between those who speak up and who have spoken up passionately for more support urgently because they need it in the most vulnerable countries in the world…

    ….if I’m forced to choose between them and countries like my own, I’m backing the first group – I’m backing the most vulnerable.

    And I want you to know we have your back and we are going to support you.

    Because that is the only way to make the change that we need, and I hope that in the course of the next two weeks, the contributor nations will tell their negotiators to stick to that objective and to get to the conclusion we want.

    Finally, if anybody tries to row back on some of the commitments they have made and if we feel things aren’t going fast enough, then it’s a clear fact that I become Foreign Secretary nearly 6 years ago now, and in that time I’ve picked up a lot of mobile phone numbers which is stored in my iPhone…

    …And I will not hesitate to use that privilege and get on to you and urge you to do more.

    And if we’re going to make a success if the COP, if we’re going to deliver for the countries that need it If we’re going to tackle climate change then we must raise that finance and understand the position they’re in.

    Thank you all very much.

  • Boris Johnson – 2021 Press Conference at the G20 Meeting in Rome

    Boris Johnson – 2021 Press Conference at the G20 Meeting in Rome

    The text of the press statement given by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, in Rome on 31 October 2021.

    Six years ago the Paris Agreement made an historic commitment to end the destruction and devastation caused by climate change.

    Together they agreed to limit global temperature increases to well below 2 degrees with a view to keeping that increase at 1.5 degrees.

    But hundreds of summits, speeches, press conferences like this later, those words and promises are starting to sound, frankly, hollow.

    The science is clear that we need to act now to halve emissions by 2030 and keep 1.5 degrees within reach.

    There are no compelling excuses for our procrastination.

    Not only have we acknowledged the problem, we are already seeing first-hand the devastation climate change causes: from heat waves and droughts to wildfires and hurricanes.

    And unlike many other global challenges, the solution to climate change is clear.

    It lies in consigning dirty fossil fuels like coal to history, in ditching gas guzzling modes of transport and recognising the role that nature plays in preserving life on this planet, and harnessing the power of nature through renewable energy rather than orchestrating its destruction.

    If we don’t act right know the Paris agreement will be looked at in the future not as the moment humanity opened its eyes to the problem, but the moment we flinched and turned away.

    We’ve seen some progress in the last few days and weeks.

    Saudi Arabia, Australia and Russia have all made net zero commitments – meaning 80% of the global economy will wipe out its contribution to climate change by the middle of the century, up from 30% thanks to the UK’s COP26 leadership.

    Countries such as the United States have doubled their spending on climate aid. Every nation at this weekend’s summit will end the financial support for

    international unabated coal projects by the end of this year.

    But these commitments, welcome as they are, are drops in a rapidly warming ocean when we consider the challenge we have all admitted is ahead of us.

    Just 12 G20 members have committed to reach net zero by 2050 or earlier. Barely half of us have submitted improved plans for how we will cut carbon emissions since the Paris Summit in 2015.

    And we have also failed to meet our commitment to provide $100bn a year to support developing countries to grow in a clean and sustainable way.

    The UN says emissions will rise by 15% by 2030, and they need to halve by then.

    The countries most responsible for historic and present-day emissions are not yet doing their fair share of the work.

    If we are going to Prevent COP26 from being a failure then that must change.

    And I must be clear, that if Glasgow fails, then the whole thing fails.

    The Paris Agreement will have crumpled at the first reckoning. The world’s only mechanism, viable mechanism, for dealing with climate change will be holed beneath the water line.

    Right now the Paris Agreement, and the hope that came with it, is just a piece of paper. We need to fill that piece of paper to populate it with real progress.

    And I know that humanity has in it the power to rise to the challenge.

    The UK has proved it can be done – we have lowered our greenhouse gas emissions by 44% in the last 30 years whilst increasing our GDP by 78%.

    And we’re cutting our contribution to climate change more and more every day.

    We have made some progress at this G20. We have had a reasonable G20, but there is a huge way still to go.

    We all know that we have the technology. What we need to do now is to raise the finance, but above all we need the political will, in Glasgow, to make those commitments.

    And to keep alive the hope of restraining the growth of our temperatures to 1.5 degrees.

    Thank you very much and see you in Glasgow.