India aims to build 450 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity by 2030 and the United States has agreed to partner with them in that effort. Major oil producers, including Russia and Saudi Arabia, are announcing stronger steps and zero emissions goals. And more than 100 nations representing 70 percent of the global economy have joined the pledge we initiated with the European Union to significantly reduce emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas far more potent than carbon dioxide. Reducing methane emissions is the single fastest option we have to slow warming.
For its part, the United States rejoined the Paris climate agreement on President Biden’s first day in office. This spring, the president went even further, pledging to reduce our emissions in line with the 1.5 degree limit, and putting the United States on pace to meet the net-zero emissions deadline.
To get there, he laid out the most ambitious climate agenda in our history. It plans for a carbon-free power system by 2035 and quadruples funding for clean-technology research, development and demonstration. It invests in our forests and fragile ecosystems, protecting our natural treasures while ensuring every community is ready to meet the climate challenge.
Fifty years ago, a moonshot defined the space race. Today, the Biden administration’s energy earth shots will marshal innovation and investment in the next generation of technologies to produce a clean-energy revolution.
But while we have made progress in averting runaway warming, more needs to be done. A sizable gap remains in cutting global carbon emissions by 45 percent by 2030, which is critical to put the world on a realistic path to reach the goal of net-zero emissions by 2050 and avoid calamity.
After Glasgow, we all must remain committed to the ambitious goals and concrete actions required during this decisive decade. Countries must revisit their plans to ensure that they align with the global 1.5-degree goal. The private sector must redouble its efforts to reinvent our global economy.
And every single one of us needs to do our part. Shop climate consciously. Ensure your employer invests in sustainability. Talk to your friends and neighbors about this issue, and support politicians who will address this crisis head on. This is the fight of our lives, and all of it matters.