Ten years after the Paris Climate Agreement, the conference brought together ministers, public decision-makers, economic actors, financial institutions, scientific experts and representatives of civil society, with a view to accelerating global mobilization in key emitters, including energy, waste and agriculture. "We no longer need to discuss the importance of methane: we need concrete decisions, partnerships and results.
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Taking advantage of its presidency of the G7, France is trying to relaunch the international mobilization on methane, a climate lever deemed more accessible than CO2. But on the ground, global emissions remain stable, according to the IEA.
Ten years after the Paris Climate Agreement, the conference brought together ministers, public decision-makers, economic actors, financial institutions, scientific experts and representatives of civil society, with a view to accelerating global mobilization in key emitters, including energy, waste and agriculture. "We no longer need to discuss the importance of methane: we need concrete decisions, partnerships and results.