Not a single G-20 country is close to hitting CO2 emission targets

A new report calls the lie on the grand Paris climate change treaty. None of the promised cuts in CO2 emissions that 200-plus countries made will come close to preventing a climate “catastrophe.” And many of the industrialized nations aren’t even living up to the promises they did make…

It gets worse. As the report shows, most G-20 countries aren’t on track to meet the modest greenhouse gas reductions they pledged to achieve by 2030.

As the Climate Transparency report notes, the EU “is not on track to meet its 2030 target.” Nor is Mexico, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Japan or Turkey.

A number of G-20 countries actually saw their emissions increase in 2017, including Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Japan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and Turkey.

Saudi Arabia’s emissions will likely double by 2030, compared with 2014. Turkey continues to increase coal-power capacity even though it “runs strongly counter” to its pledges. Japan also has several coal plants in the pipeline. Brazil’s deforestation rate has increased, despite its Paris promises to the contrary. Russia’s “target is so weak that it would not require a decrease in (greenhouse gas) emissions from current levels.”

And, to top it off, CO2 emission in China, already the world’s largest emitter, will likely continue to increase until 2030, the report finds. It notes that coal consumption in China “increased again in 2017.”