Coal mining in China has increased in 2021. VCG |
The UNEP production gap report says countries will drill or mine more than double the levels needed to keep the 1.5C threshold alive.
Oil and gas recovery is set to rise sharply with only a modest decrease in coal.
There has been little change since the first report was published in 2019.
With the COP26 climate conference just over a week away, there is already a huge focus on the carbon-cutting ambitions of the biggest emitters.
But despite the flurry of net zero emission goals and the increased pledges of many countries, some of the biggest oil, gas and coal producers have not set out plans for the rapid reductions in fossil fuels that scientists say are necessary to limit temperatures in coming years.
Earlier this year, researchers from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned of the dangers for humanity of allowing temperatures to rise by more than 1.5C this century. To keep under this threshold will require cuts in carbon emissions of around 45% by 2030 based on 2010 levels.
An oil rig sets sail - oil production is set to increase over the
next decade. VCG |
The production gap report finds that countries plan to produce around 110% more fossil fuel than would be compatible with a 1.5C temperature rise by the end of this century. The plans are around 45% more than what's needed to keep the temperature rise to 2C.
According to the study, coal production will drop but gas will increase the most over the next 20 years, to levels that are simply incompatible with the Paris agreement.
The report profiles 15 major production countries including Australia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the US and UK.
Most governments continue to provide significant policy support for fossil fuel production, the authors say.
Fracking has seen huge increases in oil and gas production in the
US. PAUL RATJE
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"However, governments continue to plan for and support levels of fossil fuel production that are vastly in excess of what we can safely burn."
While countries have devoted far more of their recovery spending after the Covid pandemic towards fossil fuel activities, there are some positives when it comes to financing.
Funding for oil, coal and gas from multilateral banks has decreased significantly in recent years - and also from some of the richer nations.
"This report shows, once again, a simple but powerful truth: we need to stop pumping oil and gas from the ground if we are to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement," said Andrea Meza, Costa Rica's minister for environment and energy.
"We must cut with both hands of the scissors, addressing demand and supply of fossil fuels simultaneously. That is why, together with Denmark, we are leading the creation of the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance to put an end to the expansion of fossil fuel extraction, plan a just transition for workers and start winding down existing production in a managed way."
'I care about the climate but my dad works in the oil industry'
Links
- UNEP Production Gap Report 2021
- Climate change: IPCC report is 'code red for humanity'
- Pope calls for radical action on climate change
- Schwarzenegger angered by world climate policies
- Households to get £5,000 to replace gas boilers
- Why does a climate summit need 25,000 people?
- How smart appliances can help fix the energy gap
- Kerry says Glasgow last best hope for the world
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