Frankie the Dinosaur tells world not to choose extinction in UN video urging climate action
A recent speaker at the United Nations had a message that has been heard many times: refusing to drastically cut back on fossil fuels could drive humans to extinction. What made the speech unusual was the bearer of the warning: Frankie the Dinosaur.
Days out from the U.N. climate summit, known as COP26, in Glasgow, Scotland, the U.N. Development Program released a video of the computer-generated Frankie calling on the world not to âchoose extinction.â
âGoing extinct is a bad thing. And driving yourselves extinct? In 70 million years, that is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard,â said Frankie, who is voiced in English by actor and songwriter Jack Black, from the podium of the U.N. General Assembly. âYou are headed for a climate disaster and yet every year governments spend hundreds of billions of public funds on fossil fuel subsidies.â
The talking dinosaur closed out his speech by framing the global pandemic as an opportunity for countries to transition to green energy sources for their economies, which elicited an ovation from delegates in the video.
Ahead of the Glasgow climate talks, some of the worldâs top carbon emitters are also calling on rich countries to do more to help finance the developing worldâs transition away from fossil fuels.
India, the worldâs third-largest emitter of carbon dioxide, said Wednesday it would not commit to a net-zero emissions target by mid-century. New Delhi instead called on developed nations to take âhistoric responsibilityâ for the greenhouse gases they have emitted over the centuries.
And a senior Chinese official said the same day that a lack of financial support from rich countries, such as their incomplete promise to mobilize $100 billion annually to the developing world by 2020, creates a âcritical issue of mutual trustâ between the two. China is the worldâs top emitter of greenhouse gases.
âMany developed nations are pushing for more climate goals when they have yet to meet existing pledges,â Chinaâs environment vice-minister Ye Min said. âAll parties should realize that climate goals unsupported by action is like building palaces in the air.â
Governments worldwide spend about $423 billion every year subsidizing fossil fuels, which are responsible for three-fourths of total greenhouse gas emissions, according to a U.N. report published Wednesday.
The real cost is likely to be much higher, given negative effects of climate change such as the loss of biodiversity and the displacement of communities due to extreme weather.
Without more-ambitious pledges to cut emissions, the world is projected to warm 2.7 degrees Celsius (4.9 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the century compared with the end of the 1800s â" far above the Paris climate accordâs goal of limiting warming to âwell belowâ 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) compared with preindustrial levels.
Countries are âutterly failing,â U.N. Secretary General António Guterres said earlier this week.
âThe era of half measures and hollow promises must end. The time for closing the leadership gap must begin in Glasgow,â Guterres said.
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