Accelerating Fast Mitigation: Summit on Methane and Non-CO2 Greenhouse Gases

Delegates at COP 28 in Dubai, UAE

Dubai, UAE//-The United States, People’s Republic of China, and United Arab Emirates today convened a Summit to accelerate actions to cut methane and other non-CO2 greenhouse gases as the fastest way to reduce near-term warming and keep a goal of limiting global average temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius within reach.

Emissions of methane and other non-CO2 greenhouse gases, and their precursors, are responsible for over half of today’s warming, but they receive far less than half of global climate attention. These greenhouse gases—including methane, hydrofluorocarbons, nitrous oxide, and tropospheric ozone—are dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of times more potent than carbon dioxide.

To keep the goal of 1.5 degrees within reach and reduce the risk of breaching near-term tipping points, the world must take fast action on non-CO2 greenhouse gases, as an essential complement to the energy transition and ending deforestation.

While CO2 will determine our long-term climate future, non-CO2 greenhouse gases have an outsized impact on near-term temperatures. Accelerated cuts to methane and non-CO2 gases could avoid up to 0.5 degrees of warming by 2050.

Non-CO2 greenhouse gases also cause almost 500,000 deaths every year from respiratory illnesses and 5-7% of global crop losses at a time when global production is already strained. Rapidly reducing non-CO2 emissions is a three-in-one solution, advancing global climate, health, and food security objectives simultaneously.

At the Summit, the UAE called on Parties to the Paris Agreement to submit 2035 nationally determined contributions that are economy-wide and cover all greenhouse gases, which is encouraged by the G20 Leaders Statement and echoes the U.S. and China commitments in the Sunnylands Statement.

The Summit featured major new announcements to address methane, hydrofluorocarbons, and cooling:

Methane has contributed to 30% of current warming. Reducing methane emissions by at least 30% by 2030 in line with the Global Methane Pledge could avoid over 0.2 degrees Celsius of warming by 2050, by far the fastest way to cool global temperatures.

At the Summit, governments

At the Summit, governments, philanthropies, and the private sector joined together to announce an unprecedented over $1 billion in new grant funding for methane reduction mobilized since COP27 in support of the Methane Finance Sprint, which more than triples current annual grant funding and will leverage billions in project investment.

The United States announced final standards to sharply reduce methane emissions from the oil and gas sector, which will achieve a nearly 80 per cent reduction below future methane emissions expected without the rule, and is expected to prevent the equivalent of 1.5 gigatons of CO2 emissions over the next 15 years.

The United States is also planning a rulemaking to review and, if appropriate, revise its Clean Air Act emission standards for new and existing municipal solid waste landfills, and in 2024 will release updates on emissions estimates for municipal solid waste landfills.

The European Union showcased its first-ever methane regulations on oil, gas, and coal, including establishing a methane import standard in 2030.

Turkmenistan joined the Global Methane Pledge. Kazakhstan joined the Global Methane Pledge and announced cooperation with the United States to develop Kazakhstan’s national standards to eliminate non-emergency venting of methane and require leak detection and repair in the oil and gas sector as soon as possible before 2030, as part of a U.S.-Kazakhstan Joint Statement on Accelerating Methane Mitigation to Achieve the Global Methane Pledge.

African Eye Report

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