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Biden Says ‘Climate Crisis Is About Human Security’ at COP27

Published: November 11, 2022
U.S. President Joe Biden delivers a speech at the COP27 climate summit, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt on November 11, 2022. (Image: REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany)

SHARM EL-SHEIKH, EGYPT — U.S. President Joe Biden addressed the COP27 climate conference in Egypt on Friday, Nov. 11, saying human faces an existential threat in the form of climate change, and that the United States was doing its part to combat it.

“The climate crisis is about human security, economic security, environmental security, national security, and the very life of the planet,” Biden said, before outlining steps the United States, the world’s second-biggest greenhouse gas emitter, was taking.

“I can stand here as president of the United States of America and say with confidence, the United States of America will meet our emissions targets by 2030,” he said.

His speech was intended to remind government representatives gathered in Sharm el-Sheikh to keep alive a goal of keeping the global average temperature rise within 1.5 degrees Celsius to avert the worst impacts of planetary warming. It came as a slew of crises — from the war in Ukraine to rampant inflation — distract international focus.

“Against this backdrop, it’s more urgent than ever that we double down on our climate commitments. Russia’s war only enhances the urgency of the need to transition the world off its dependence on fossil fuels,” he said.

Prior to his arrival, Biden’s administration sought to set the stage by unveiling a domestic plan to crack down hard on the U.S. oil and gas industry’s emissions of methane, one of the most powerful greenhouse gases, in a move that defied months of lobbying by drillers.

Washington and the EU were also planning to issue a joint declaration on Friday pledging more action on oil industry methane, building on an international deal launched last year and since signed by 119 nations to cut economy-wide emissions 30 percent this decade.

A United Nations report released last week says that global emissions are on track to rise 10.6 percent by 2030 compared with 2010 levels.

The report associated devastating storms, droughts, wildfires and floods, which inflict billions of dollars in damage worldwide, with man-made climate change.

Mainstream scientists say emissions must instead drop 43 percent by that time to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial temperatures as targeted by the Paris Agreement of 2015 — the threshold above which climate change risks are said to start spinning out of control.

However, many countries, including the United States and members of the European Union, are also calling for increased supply of fossil fuels in the near-term to help bring down consumer energy prices that have spiked since Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Meanwhile, U.N. organizers have been criticized by human rights activists for holding the COP27 in Egypt, whose government has been accused of abuses since a 2013 military overthrow of its first democratically elected president.

Upon arrival, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi told U.S. President Joe Biden that Egypt has launched a national strategy for human rights and is keen to develop in that regard.

Reuters contributed to this report.