Monday, November 15, 2021

Notations On Our World (Weekly Edition): On the Week That Was in Our World



 

A new week is upon us.   Our team pulled together a number of key developments on COP26 (and as the World awaits COP28 in 2 years in the UAE), as Facebook became part of "META", as the COVID Drugs are coming online in spite of COVID raging on in Europe and as Bill Gates reflected upon Climate to close out this edition of "Notations" here in our Visions Corner:

 
Bloomberg

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Does the Glasgow Pact Really Matter?

By Emma Ross-Thomas

Fourteen days of talks and a few all-nighters at a sprawling, heavily disinfected conference center in Glasgow, Scotland produced some breakthrough pledges, a hard set of rules on carbon markets and some big aspirations that will have to be tested against reality in the years ahead. 

Here’s a snapshot of the most important outcomes.


Coal Target

It was watered down at the last-minute to a pledge to “phase down” rather than “phase out” coal power, but the inclusion is still significant as the first mention of coal in a COP text. It falls short of the goal of “consigning coal to history,” but it goes further than the G-20 has to date and sends a clear signal. 

China-U.S. Deal

The biggest surprise in Glasgow was an agreement by the two biggest emitters to work together. No big concrete action, but good news the pair are at least talking on climate amid the broader diplomatic standoff. China had been all but absent from the talks until then.

Carbon-Trading Rules

Hard-won and long-awaited. The rules on international carbon trading bring clarity to companies and standardization that should help reduce emissions, though some activists are worried they aren’t quite tight enough. The pressure to pin down rules was growing as the voluntary market for offsets is growing in an unregulated sprawl.

Methane Pledge 

More than 100 countries agreed to slash methane; and there's a reference to methane for the first time in the pact. It’s not binding, but again, a powerful signal that it’s time to tackle emissions that are much more potent than CO2. 

Crank Up the Plans

Countries have to come back next year with better climate plans. But there’s a get-out clause

Scrutiny 

New rules were agreed that will allow for greater scrutiny on emissions reporting. At last, climate targets should be comparable, allowing for everyone to assess what everyone else is doing.

Cash for Damage

For the first time, there’s a recognition that countries struck by catastrophic climate events will get help. There’s an agreement to properly set up a mechanism — though the finer details and exact cash still need to be hashed out. That’s something for COP27, in Egypt next year.

Deforestation

Many of the side-deals agreed at COP disappointed, but a pact on deforestation could make a difference. Unlike some of the other deals, on this one the main players signed up. 

Banks

Former Bank of England Governor Mark Carney cajoled banks, investors and insurers representing $130 trillion in assets to decarbonize their businesses by mid-century. Finance is a powerful tool in the fight against climate change but the list doesn’t include the world’s three biggest banks, all of which are Chinese and major providers of coal finance.

The Magic Number

All this leaves us on course for warming of 1.8 degrees Celsius, if all the pledges come to pass, according to the IEA, and it’s a big if. That’s much better than where we were on the way into COP, but still way above what’s safe.


FACEBOOK
Facebook Papers Show a Company Locked in Zuckerberg’s Stranglehold
By Mark Di Stefano and Sylvia Varnham O'Regan

It’s no secret that Mark Zuckerberg runs Facebook with an iron fist. But what hasn’t been fully understood is how he frequently became the single point of control for many decisions at a sprawling company with more than 60,000 employees, leading to some of the problems the company faces today, internal company documents and interviews with former senior executives show.

Documents reviewed by The Information highlight how Zuckerberg alone often made decisions about how the company would deal with a deluge of blatant misinformation, violence and hate speech posted on its apps. 

   READ THE FULL STORY    





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GatesNotesGatesNotes
My report from the climate change summit
Reflections from COP26
By Bill Gates | November 8, 2021
Last week I spent three days at COP26, the global summit on climate change that was held in Glasgow, Scotland. The main thing I took away from my time there was how much the conversation has changed since 2015, when the world last got together for a major summit on this problem.
In a post I published on Gates Notes, I wrote about three big shifts in the climate discussion I’ve seen over the past few years, and why they make me more optimistic that we can prevent the worst global-warming scenarios. (Read the post here.)
And in case you didn’t see them last week, here are two posts I shared before and during the COP:
  • An op-ed about what I hoped would happen there.
  • The brief speech I gave at the World Leaders Summit.
With all this momentum, I’m inspired to keep doing my part to avoid a climate disaster, and I hope you are too.
 

Bill signature