The prospect of progress at the two-day summit at the Rome Convention Centre dimmed in the days before the summit when China submitted its new targets to the United Nations with barely any increase in ambition

Climate change cannot be denied,” Trudeau said on Twitter. “And climate action cannot be delayed. Working together with our partners, we need to tackle this global crisis with urgency and ambition.”

“We face a simple choice,” he told leaders at the table. “We can act now, or regret it later.”
Repeated attempts for Trudeau and Draghi to have a bilateral meeting in Rome were scuttled by time limitations. Saturday’s planned meeting was cancelled by Italy because Draghi was running too far behind. On Sunday the rescheduled meeting was first on, then off because the morning climate session went long. Another round of rescheduling and cancellation then took place when Trudeau’s scheduled meeting with Argentine President Alberto Fernandez interfered.

Von Der Leyen met with Trudeau for a one-on-one discussion Sunday morning at his hotel.
“I want to thank you for being such a strong, dedicated ally in the fight against climate change,” she told him. “I think this is the topic of not only today, but also the century, of maximum importance.”
The United Nations reiterated warnings this week that with the current policies promised by parties to the Paris climate agreement, the Earth will warm more than 2.7 C by the end of this century.

“Scientists tell us that under current policies, the consequence of climate change for the environment and the world’s population will be catastrophic,” said Draghi. “The cost of action, however, high it may seem, is trivial compared to the price of inaction.”
The prospect of progress at the two-day summit at the Rome Convention Centre dimmed in the days before the summit when China submitted its new targets to the United Nations with barely any increase in ambition.
China still plans to keep growing emissions until 2030, and isn’t agreeing to move its net zero target up from 2060. It was slightly more specific about using more renewable energy and planting more trees.

Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said Saturday that Xi’s absence wasn’t ideal, but wouldn’t comment on what impact she thought that may have on the climate talks.
“The G20, of course, is most effective when all the G20 leaders are at the table,” she said. “Having said that, I do think we also need to recognize that the fight against COVID is not finished yet and different countries will take different decisions about international travel while we’re still finishing the fight against COVID.”
Xi was one of five G20 leaders who didn’t make the trip. The leaders of Russia, Mexico, Brazil and Japan also sent officials and participated themselves only virtually.

But China’s importance to the G20 negotiations on ending coal-fired electricity made Xi’s absence potentially the most troublesome. He is also not attending the COP26 summit, which kicked off in Glasgow, Scotland on Sunday.
Trudeau and Draghi had both hoped for a strong, united message on climate from the G20 to carry into COP. The G20 isn’t just responsible for 80 per cent of global economic output, it also produces about 80 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 31, 2021.
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