British Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned at the opening of the climate summit in Glasgow (northern Britain) that any failure to stop climate change will result in the demise of several cities in the world, while Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will be absent from the summit after the absence of some security arrangements requested by it. Ankara.

"Future generations will not forgive us if we fail to reach a deal to cut carbon emissions," Johnson said, adding that Britain would end the sale of fuel-based cars by 2030.

"The world's anger and impatience will only be contained if we make this COP26 conference in Glasgow the moment we get really serious about climate change, and that includes coal, cars, money and trees," the British official added.

More than 150 world leaders participating in the work of the climate summit seek to put an end to global warming and discuss ways to reduce emissions by 2030, and delegations representing about 200 countries are participating in the summit, while Chinese Presidents Xi Jinping and Russian Vladimir Putin are absent. who share the video.


Erdogan miss

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan retracted his plan to attend the climate summit, and Turkish channel NTV quoted Erdogan on Monday as saying that he had decided not to attend the summit in Glasgow after Britain failed to meet Turkish demands related to security arrangements, without giving details of The nature of the security arrangements requested by Turkey.

It is expected that the leaders of countries will stress the rapid move to take measures to stop the global warming, and limit it to the level of one and a half degrees compared to pre-industrial levels, a level that scientists say will spare the Earth the most devastating consequences of global warming.

The climate summit is being held amid an atmosphere of anger and resentment after major industrialized countries were accused of failing to make new ambitious pledges to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

group of 20

The United Nations climate conference is also taking place after the failure of the Group of 20 summit two days ago to commit to a date set in 2050 to reach the level of zero carbon emissions, which is widely seen as a condition to prevent the worsening of global warming.

The United Nations climate conference convenes on Monday after the Group of 20 summit failed two days ago to stick to a date set in 2050 to reach zero carbon emissions.

Today, many world leaders will speak at the Glasgow summit to defend their countries' records in the face of climate change, and host Britain describes the summit as an opportunity, either to achieve great success or complete failure.

After two days of speeches by world leaders, starting on Monday, technical negotiations will follow, and no agreements are likely to be concluded until hours or even days after the conference ends on November 12.

Biden's criticism

US President Joe Biden criticized China and Russia for not bringing proposals to the table, and Biden, who faces domestic opposition to his climate ambitions, told reporters during the G-20 that "the disappointment is that Russia and ... China have not made any commitments to deal with climate change."

To achieve the goal of reducing carbon emissions, the conference needs to come up with more ambitious pledges to reduce emissions, raise billions to finance climate change, and finalize the rules to implement the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, with the unanimous approval of the nearly 200 countries that have signed it.