Russian President Vladimir Putin Photo: Courtesy
President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday vowed
that Russia, one of the world’s major producers of oil and gas, would do its
part to fight climate change.
“We must respond to the challenges of
climate change,” Putin said in his annual state of the nation address to
lawmakers and regional governors.
He said that Russia has to focus on
adaptation to climate change, too, including in agriculture, housing and
utilities, as well as its “entire infrastructure”.
He also called on Russia to “create an
industry for the utilisation of carbon emissions”.
And he set a target for Russia, which is
one of the world’s top carbon emitters, for its emissions to be “less than in
the European Union.”
Russia has set numerous heat records in
recent years, with the first half of 2020 seeing the warmest temperatures since
the country began weather observations.
The head of science at Russia’s weather
service, Roman Vilfand, said last month that cataclysmic weather events had
doubled in the country over the past 25 years.
Putin on Thursday will address an
international climate summit hosted by the United States, meant to mark its
return to the frontlines of the fight against climate change, after former
president Donald Trump backed away from the issue.
He has also made the development of Russia’s Arctic region a strategic priority as ice cover melts and the Northern Sea Route becomes more accessible, which Moscow aims to use in exporting hydrocarbons to Asia.
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