The 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference under UNFCCC, more commonly referred to as COP26, was the 26th United Nations Climate Change conference, held at the SEC Centre in Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom, from 31 October to 13 November 2021.
2. Scope of the
presentation
• Conference of Parties (COP)
• Paris Climate Agreement
• Development since Paris
Climate Agreement
• COP 26: Glasgow 2021
• Bangladesh at COP26
• Achievements and Limitations
of Glasgow Climate Pact
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4. What is COP?
• COP: Supreme decision-making body of the UNFCCC
• Scope: Implementation of the Convention and any other legal
instruments that the COP adopts and take decisions necessary
to promote the effective implementation of the Convention
• Key Task: Review the national communications and emission
inventories submitted by Parties
• Membership: 197 Parties
• Outcome: Declaration/Agreement/Pact
Paris Climate Agreement (COP21)
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5. Party Negotiation Groups of COP
SIDS (Small Island
Developing States)
African Group
LDCs (Least
Developed
Countries)
G77 & China
AILAC (Independent
Alliance of Latin
America and the
Caribbean)
LMDCs (Like-Minded
Developing
Countries)
Arab Group
EIG (Environmental
Integrity Group)
CVF Umbrella Group EU (European Union)
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6. 6
Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC): are non-binding
national plans highlighting climate actions, including climate
related targets for greenhouse gas emission reductions,
policies and measures governments aim to implement in
response to climate change and as a contribution to achieve
the global targets set out in the Paris Agreement.
Net zero emission: means that all man-made greenhouse gas
emissions must be removed from the atmosphere through
reduction measures, thus reducing the Earth’s net climate
balance.
Loss and Damage: process to refer to the harms caused by
anthropogenic climate change
14. Why
COP26
was
special
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“This COP is keeping 1.5 alive
about.”
It marks the first five-year interval
after Paris (technically six,
because, you know)—a deadline
for countries to demonstrate
tangible progress and ratchet up
climate ambitions.
16. COP26:
Important
Agenda
• Ensuring the commitments of
major carbon emitting countries
to limit carbon emission to keep
global warming below 1.5
• Scaling up climate fund urgently
to support climate vulnerable
countries and fulfilling the USD
100 billion pledge
• Ensuring the bigger share of
climate fund towards
adaptation
• Finalising the Paris Rulebook to
ensure the accountability
• Establishing the mechanism for
loss and damage
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18. Five
dealmakers
who will
influence the
outcome at
COP26
Xie Zhenhua: China's man for all
seasons
Ayman Shasly: Saudi's resolute
defender
Alok Sharma: The Briton in the
middle
Sheikh Hasina: The voice of the
vulnerable
Teresa Ribera: Europe's bridge-
builder
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19. Bangladesh
at COP26
• 'Unesco-Bangladesh Bangabandhu Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman International Prize for
the Creative Economy’
• Bilateral meetings with British Prime
Minister Boris Johnson, French President
Emmanuel Macron, Australian Prime
Minister Scott Morrison, UK’s Prince
Charles
• Joint meeting of the Climate Vulnerable
Forum (CVF)-Commonwealth High Level
Panel Discussion on Climate Prosperity
Partnership
• Meetings on "Action and Solidarity-the
critical decade“
• Session on "Women and Climate Change"
• Session on "Forging a CVF COP 26 Climate
Emergency Pact“
• Scottish parliament event on "A
Bangladesh Vision for Global Climate
Prosperity"
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20. Bangladesh’s
Four Point at
COP
• The major emitters must submit
ambitious NDCs and implement
those.
• The developed countries should
fulfil their commitments of
providing 100 billion dollars
annually with a 50:50 balance
between adaptation and
mitigation.
• The developed countries should
disseminate clean and green
technology at affordable costs to
the most vulnerable countries.
"The development needs of the
CVF countries also need to be
considered.“
• Address the issue of loss and
damage and global sharing of
responsibility for climate
migrants.
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21. Mujib Climate Prosperity Plan – a journey from climate
vulnerability to resilience to climate prosperity
Climate Emergency Pact
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23. Glasgow
Climate
Pact: At a
Glance
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I. Science and urgency
II. Adaptation
III. Adaptation finance
IV. Mitigation
V. Finance, technology transfer and capacity-
building for mitigation and adaptation
VI. Loss and damage
VII. Implementation
VIII. Collaboration
24. Reactions
• Alok Sharma, President of
COP26 – "May I just say to
all delegates I apologise
for the way this process
has unfolded and I am
deeply sorry. I also
understand the deep
disappointment, but I
think as you have noted,
it's also vital that we
protect this package."
• Saleemul Huq, ICCCD –
“As far as I am concerned,
it is a failure.”
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25. Reactions
• Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama – the 1.5C target leaves
Glasgow “battered, bruised, but alive”.
• Amnesty International reacts to Cop26 outcome – ““Leaders
have catastrophically betrayed humanity at large by failing to
protect people most affected by the climate crisis and instead
caving into the interests of fossil fuel and other powerful
corporations,”
• US Climate Envoy John Kerry welcomed the agreement but said
good compromises leave everyone slightly unsatisfied.
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26. Achievements
of the Pact
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Targeting fossil fuels and emission
cuts
Reaffirming Paris agreement
Adaptation and Climate Finance
Rules for global carbon markets
Loss and Damage