Analysis
The **2015 Paris Agreement (COP21)** did mark a unprecedented *global consensus* to transition away from fossil-fuel-dependent growth, with 196 parties adopting nationally determined contributions (NDCs) to curb emissions—a departure from the Industrial Revolution’s carbon-intensive model. However, the agreement is **non-binding** in enforcement, and prior efforts (e.g., the 1992 UNFCCC, Kyoto Protocol) also aimed at systemic change, albeit with narrower scope. Figueres’ emphasis on *intentionality* and *timeline* (e.g., mid-century net-zero goals) is correct, but the claim risks implying COP21 was the *first* such attempt, ignoring earlier, if less comprehensive, frameworks.
Background
The **Industrial Revolution (18th–19th centuries)** established economic growth tied to fossil fuel use, with CO₂ levels rising from ~280 ppm to over 400 ppm by 2015. COP21’s Paris Agreement was the first *universal* climate pact, but its success depends on voluntary national actions, not a mandated overhaul. Previous agreements like the **Kyoto Protocol (1997)** targeted emissions cuts but lacked participation from major emitters (e.g., the U.S. and China).
Verdict summary
Figueres’ claim about COP21’s ambition to *intentionally* reshape global economic models is broadly accurate, but the framing overstates its immediate, binding impact and historical uniqueness.