Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumBaku Reeks Of Oil And Trump For Climate Summit But Hopes For Blahblah Potential Agreement Blahblahblahblah
More than 100 heads of state and government are expected to land in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, over the next few days and the first thing they are likely to notice is the smell of oil. The odour hangs heavy in the air, evidence of the abundance of fossil fuels in this small country on the shores of the Caspian Sea.
Flaring from refineries lights up the night sky, and the city is dotted with diminutive nodding donkey oil wells raising and lowering their pistons as they draw from the earth. Even the national symbol is a gas flame, epitomised in the shape of three skyscrapers that tower over the city. Azerbaijan has been built on oil since the mid-19th century, and fossil fuels now make up 90% of its exports. There could be no starker reminder of the core question that world leaders have come to Baku to decide: whether the planet will burn so that fossil fuel producers can continue to make money, or whether to take a different path.
That the worlds biggest economy, the US, is about to shift away from the focus on clean energy fostered by Joe Biden towards the drill, baby, drill policies of Donald Trump will be a main topic of conversation for the tens of thousands of delegates at the Cop29 UN climate summit. However, many will point out that no country has ever produced as much oil and gas as the US does now, with 20% more oil and gas licences issued during the Biden administration than during Trumps first term.
Climate leaders reacted with defiance to the US election outcome. The result from this election will be seen as a major blow to global climate action but it cannot and will not halt the changes under way to decarbonise the economy and meet the goals of the Paris agreement, declared Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate chief who is a co-founder of the Global Optimism thinktank.
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The prospects of a strong outcome from the Baku summit may appear dim, with the far right and anti-net zero voices on the rise in the US, Europe and elsewhere. But there is hope that Cop29 will address at least one of the major issues preventing action: money. Shifting to clean energy makes economic as well as scientific sense, but the incumbency of fossil fuels is so strong that massive investment will be needed to shift the world on to that lower-carbon, lower-waste, more productive and healthier path.
Ed. - "But there is hope" - Oh FUCK OFF.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/nov/08/cop29-baku-climate-talks-odour-of-oil-return-of-trump-finance
MrWowWow
(381 posts)More like hopelessness. Look where COP29 is being held! The place is floating in oil. Hope springs eternal just like an oil gusher on a fucking oil drilling platform!
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Nature always bats last, and NEVER strikes out!
2naSalit
(92,665 posts)Hope, schmope. That word, like many, has become meaningless.