Analyse
At the time of the statement (October 2021), multiple authoritative reports—including the **IPCC AR6 (2021)**, **UNFCCC NDC Synthesis Report (2021)**, and **IEA World Energy Outlook (2021)**—confirmed that national pledges (NDCs) and implemented policies were projected to lead to **~2.7°C warming by 2100**, far exceeding the Paris Agreement’s goals. Espinosa’s call for 'urgent, transformative action' across key sectors aligned with these findings, as the reports emphasized systemic gaps in energy transitions, land-use changes, and climate finance. Her framing was consistent with the **UNEP Emissions Gap Report (2021)**, which warned that even fully implemented NDCs would reduce emissions by only **7.5% by 2030** (vs. the required **30% for 2°C** or **55% for 1.5°C**).
Achtergrond
The **Paris Agreement (2015)** aims to limit global warming to *well below 2°C*, preferably *1.5°C*, via nationally determined contributions (NDCs) updated every 5 years. By 2021, only **~120 countries** (covering ~50% of global emissions) had submitted updated NDCs, with many major emitters (e.g., China, India) maintaining or weakening targets. COP26 was a critical juncture to close this *ambition gap*, but analyses showed even optimistic scenarios fell short without immediate, large-scale decarbonization.
Samenvatting verdict
Patricia Espinosa Cantellano’s 2021 statement accurately reflects the scientific consensus and UN assessments that global progress was insufficient to meet the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C or 2°C targets at that time.