Background Briefing: November 2, 2021
COP26 Agreements on Cutting Methane and Ending Deforestation
We begin with the end of the two-day U.N. Climate summit of world leaders and get an assessment of what has been achieved as the U.S. and the E.U. announce a global agreement to cut methane emissions by 30% by 2030 along with world leaders agreeing to end and reverse deforestation. Joining us is Andrew Revkin, Director of the Initiative on Communication Innovation & Impact at the Earth Institute of Columbia University who has won most of the top awards in science journalism over a three-decades-long career including 21 years at The New York Times. His books include The Burning Season: The Murder of Chico Mendes and the Fight for the Amazon Rain Forest, Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast, and The Human Planet: Earth at the Dawn of the Anthropocene and he blogs at revkin.bulletin.com where his latest article is “Big Oil in the Hot Seat – and Everyone Wins?” We discuss how tackling methane is the low hanging fruit although some of the biggest emitters Russia, China and India did not sign on in a race to stop the increasing levels of methane spewing from fracking, the melting permafrost in Siberia, wetlands, rice paddies and agriculture in particular from cattle.
How Climate Agreements Impact the North-South Divide