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COP28
The 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP28, was held from November 30 to December 13 at Expo City in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The conference was intended for governments to agree on policies to limit global temperature rises and adapt to climate change impacts. A final compromise agreement, the UAE Consensus, was reached, committing signatory countries to move away from carbon energy sources and reach net zero by 2050. However, the deal was criticized for its lack of clear commitment to fossil fuel phase-out or phase-down, and China and India did not sign the pledge to triple their renewable energy output. The conference was also marred by controversy surrounding its president, Sultan Al Jaber, and the host country's environmental record and role as a major fossil fuel producer.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.US under Donald Trump
- 2.US under Joe Biden
- 3.China under Xi Jinping
- 4.Oil Market
- 5.Climate Change
- 6.Multilateralism
- 7.Biodiversity
- 8.UK under Keir Starmer
- 9.Pollution
- 10.Argentina under Javier Milei
- 11.Azerbaijan under Ilham Aliyev
- 12.Amazon Deforestation
countries
- 1.China
- 2.Germany
- 3.Egypt
- 4.Spain
- 5.France
- 6.United Kingdom
- 7.India
- 8.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 9.Japan
- 10.Lebanon
- 11.Moldova, Republic of
- 12.Norway
organizations
- 1.Alliance of Small Island States
- 2.United Nations
- 3.Climate Action Tracker
- 4.Copernicus Climate Change Service
- 5.Council on Foreign Relations
- 6.Crude Accountability
- 7.European Union
- 8.G20
- 9.Global Witness
- 10.Human Rights Watch
- 11.International Energy Agency
- 12.NewClimate Institute
persons
- 1.Donald Trump
- 2.Annalena Baerbock
- 3.António Guterres
- 4.Mukhtar Babayev
- 5.Elnur Soltanov
- 6.Barry Rabe
- 7.Celeste Saulo
- 8.Clarence Edwards
- 9.Emin Huseynov
- 10.Emmanuel Macron
- 11.Greta Thunberg
- 12.Heydar Aliyev