
BERLIN, Dec 12 (Bernama-dpa) — Ten years after the landmark Paris climate agreement, scientists and environmental groups warn the world is far off track from its climate goals, reported German Press Agency (dpa).
The agreement, adopted on December 12, 2015, by nearly 200 countries, commits nations to limiting global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius, ideally to 1.5 degrees, above pre-industrial levels.
Martin Kaiser, head of Greenpeace Germany, told dpa the Paris Agreement remained a global compass for climate policy but said it would only stay relevant if major economies, particularly the G20, closed the gap between ambition and action.
Kaiser said the German government under Chancellor Friedrich Merz had a responsibility to steer the country back towards a 1.5-degree pathway.
But this was the opposite of what the government and the conservative bloc were pursuing in Brussels under the guise of modernisation and deregulation, he said.
Kaiser said immediate measures in the transport, buildings and land-use sectors would be needed to bring Germany back on course.
“Climate protection is not a burden, but the foundation for freedom, security and prosperity in the future,” he said.
Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), said many had left the 2015 Paris summit with a sense of relief. “Today, a decade later, we must acknowledge that we have failed so far,” he added.
— BERNAMA-dpa