UN climate chief’s call to phase out fossil fuels may be ignored at talks


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A climate conference hosted by the United Nations will happen this fall, but despite calls to phase out fossil fuels, the topic may not even be part of the discussion. The U.N. climate chief says it’s a vital part of the conversation surrounding the Earth’s warming, and claims world leaders need to discuss a process to completely phase out fossil fuels. But what makes the agenda isn’t up to him, it’s up to Sultan Al Jaber.

Al Jaber is the president of this year’s negotiations and the head of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company. His company is the 12th largest oil producing company in the world, producing 2 million barrels of oil a day with a goal to increase drilling to 5 million barrels a day by 2027.

The man poised to lead the world’s conversation on climate change is also part of a fossil fuel money machine.

This story is getting a lot of attention across the media landscape. There are more than 50 news sources reporting the story. While left-leaning outlets are reporting that conference leadership could interfere with discussions of phasing out fossil fuels, right-leaning outlets are underreporting the story.

There is a rotating leader of climate talks each year for the U.N. For the past two years, the person in charge has been largely for oil and gas. In 2022, the leader was the foreign minister of Egypt, a nation with an economy heavily reliant on natural gas exports. The idea of phasing out fossil fuels never made it on the agenda under that leadership.

Al Jaber has previously said the real issue is phasing out emissions of fossil fuels by promoting carbon capture technology to remove pollutants from the air. The U.N. climate chief has said that won’t be enough, arguing that phasing out fossil fuels themselves is an imminent discussion needed among world leaders to curb global warming.

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Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

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Full story

A climate conference hosted by the United Nations will happen this fall, but despite calls to phase out fossil fuels, the topic may not even be part of the discussion. The U.N. climate chief says it’s a vital part of the conversation surrounding the Earth’s warming, and claims world leaders need to discuss a process to completely phase out fossil fuels. But what makes the agenda isn’t up to him, it’s up to Sultan Al Jaber.

Al Jaber is the president of this year’s negotiations and the head of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company. His company is the 12th largest oil producing company in the world, producing 2 million barrels of oil a day with a goal to increase drilling to 5 million barrels a day by 2027.

The man poised to lead the world’s conversation on climate change is also part of a fossil fuel money machine.

This story is getting a lot of attention across the media landscape. There are more than 50 news sources reporting the story. While left-leaning outlets are reporting that conference leadership could interfere with discussions of phasing out fossil fuels, right-leaning outlets are underreporting the story.

There is a rotating leader of climate talks each year for the U.N. For the past two years, the person in charge has been largely for oil and gas. In 2022, the leader was the foreign minister of Egypt, a nation with an economy heavily reliant on natural gas exports. The idea of phasing out fossil fuels never made it on the agenda under that leadership.

Al Jaber has previously said the real issue is phasing out emissions of fossil fuels by promoting carbon capture technology to remove pollutants from the air. The U.N. climate chief has said that won’t be enough, arguing that phasing out fossil fuels themselves is an imminent discussion needed among world leaders to curb global warming.

Tags: , , , ,

Media landscape

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62 total sources

Key points from the Left

No summary available because of a lack of coverage.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

No summary available because of a lack of coverage.

Report an issue with this summary

Other (sources without bias rating):

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