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Ten years after the Paris Climate Agreement

Ten years after the Paris Climate Agreement

De : RFI English
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This eight-part podcast series examining the Paris Agreement ten years on, featuring global climate leaders discussing progress, challenges, and the dramatic shift in power towards emerging economies. The series explores how multilateral cooperation has evolved despite geopolitical fractures, from industrial transformation and innovative financing to the changing rules of climate leadership. The podcast is based on 28 interviews carried out globally by independent journalist Sophie Larmoyer on behalf of IDDRI, the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations.The series is co-produced in English by RFI and IDDRI.

France Médias Monde
Politique et gouvernement Sciences politiques
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    Épisodes
    • Episode Five: How to face climate challenges in a fragmented world?
      Jan 24 2026
      This eight-part podcast series examining the Paris Agreement ten years on, featuring global climate leaders discussing progress, challenges, and the dramatic shift in power towards emerging economies. The series explores how multilateral cooperation has evolved despite geopolitical fractures, from industrial transformation and innovative financing to the changing rules of climate leadership. This episode examines how the optimistic "Spirit of Paris" from the 2015 COP21 climate summit has dissipated amid years of geopolitical disruption and global instability. The podcast is based on 28 interviews carried out globally by journalist Sophie Larmoyer on behalf of IDDRI, the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations. The optimistic "Spirit of Paris" from COP21 in 2015 has dissipated. A decade on, geopolitical fractures threaten the universal climate cooperation that underpinned the Paris Agreement. War and Energy "Russia's invasion of Ukraine changed everything," explains Laurence Tubiana of the European Climate Foundation. "Oil-producing countries took over the discussion, saying 'energy security is us.' And that changed everything." The resulting crisis, coupled with rising populism and declining democracy, has pushed climate ambition into the background. Brazilian researcher Sergio Gusmao Suchodolski notes that whilst over 50% of countries operated democratically twenty years ago, "less than 27% of countries adopt democracy as a system" today. Episode Four: climate crises - the urgency to adapt Science Under Attack Donald Trump's return to the US presidency exemplifies the assault on climate action. "They are taking apart the architecture of what we need to track climate change," warns Sonja Klinsky of the University of Arizona. "Removing funding for science, pulling websites down, defunding meteorological organizations. I cannot stress enough how destructive this administration is being." German activist Luisa Neubauer connects the patterns: "Those who are destroying our climate are destroying our democracies alike. For them it's all the same, so for us it must become a shared struggle." Episode Three: energy, the key to success Broken Promises Meanwhile, developing countries feel squeezed. "Climate policy is often seen as something imposed by the rich countries who put all their emissions into the air and has now come to tell us what to do," explains Hilton Trollip of the University of Cape Town. Indian researcher Arunabha Ghosh adds: "It's like you're dating someone for 10 years and your promises are not being kept. How much longer will you carry on in that kind of relationship?" Episode Two: the decarbonisation quest Yet experts insist progress remains possible. "The United States is one country," notes Klinsky. "We're giving them way more power than they deserve. There have been many times when they haven't been a strong climate leader. And yet multilateralism has continued." Brazil's Ana Toni, director general of COP30, calls for honest reassessment: "The multilateral system reflects the countries of the past. The world has changed totally. We need this refresh. Not being afraid to say we need to improve because international cooperation needs to change as well." Episode One: behind the scenes of a historic agreement Ten years after Paris, can climate action adapt to this new geopolitical reality whilst maintaining its universal ambition? That's the question this episode explores.
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      32 min
    • Episode Four: climate crises - the urgency to adapt
      Dec 11 2025

      This eight-part podcast series examining the Paris Agreement ten years on, featuring global climate leaders discussing progress, challenges, and the dramatic shift in power towards emerging economies. The series explores how multilateral cooperation has evolved despite geopolitical fractures, from industrial transformation and innovative financing to the changing rules of climate leadership. This episode looks at the challenges in adapting to climate change.The podcast is based on 28 interviews carried out globally by journalist Sophie Larmoyer on behalf of IDDRI, the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations.

      A decade after the Paris Agreement, climate adaptation has emerged as an urgent priority as impacts intensify globally, yet implementation remains fragmented and catastrophically underfunded despite mounting evidence of existential threats.

      Rising seas and mounting losses

      Sea levels have risen 23 centimetres since the early twentieth century, now accelerating at 4.4 millimetres annually - twice the rate of the 1990s. For atoll nations such as the Marshall Islands, barely two metres above sea level, this poses existential threats. Wells once used for washing now contain only brackish water, forcing complete reliance on rainwater.

      Impacts have become ubiquitous and severe. In India, 75 percent of districts are now hotspots for extreme climate events affecting 80 percent of the population. Europe has suffered €738 billion in climate damages and 240,000 deaths over four decades, with summer 2025 alone costing €43 billion.

      The adaptation funding gap

      The Paris Agreement established a Global Adaptation Goal in 2015, but progress remains disconnected. Adaptation fundamentally addresses inequalities, as vulnerability stems from poverty and lack of resources. Maladaptation poses significant risks when well-intentioned actions worsen problems—sea walls may flood neighbouring areas, whilst irrigation systems become unsustainable as droughts intensify.

      Adaptation plans require massive financing, primarily from public funds. A 2023 UN report estimated needs at 10 to 18 times current financial flows dedicated to adaptation. Adaptation remains fundamentally local, varying dramatically between regions. The construction sector faces challenges scaling existing solutions for both cold and heat protection as urbanisation accelerates, particularly in Africa.

      Agriculture represents a critical frontier. Sahel and North African countries lead in reimagining farming through agroecological transitions, whilst India promotes climate-resilient millets and solar-powered irrigation. Wealthy countries with high productivity resist change, claiming competitive pressures preclude environmental protection.

      According to the experts interviewed for this series, businesses must measure climate risks across supply chains to adapt effectively. Insurers increasingly refuse coverage in California and Florida, with certain properties becoming uninsurable earlier than anticipated.

      The fundamental challenge, they agree, remains defining risk tolerance, which varies greatly between societies. Current trajectories suggest global warming of three degrees - four degrees for France - rendering adaptation to such conditions illusory.

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      33 min
    • Episode Three: energy, the key to success
      Dec 11 2025

      This eight-part podcast series examining the Paris Agreement ten years on, featuring global climate leaders discussing progress, challenges, and the dramatic shift in power towards emerging economies. The series explores how multilateral cooperation has evolved despite geopolitical fractures, from industrial transformation and innovative financing to the changing rules of climate leadership. This episode looks at need for energy and how its production is aggravating the climate crisis. The podcast is based on 28 interviews carried out globally by journalist Sophie Larmoyer on behalf of IDDRI, the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations.

      A decade after the Paris Agreement, renewable energy has achieved remarkable progress with costs plummeting and deployment accelerating, yet fossil fuels maintain their grip through political resistance and economic lock-in.

      Energy accounts for two-thirds of global emissions. Fossil fuels represent 66 percent of primary energy despite declining share, whilst the remaining third comprises nuclear and renewables.

      Nuclear generates 9 percent of global electricity yet remains inaccessible for many developing nations due to high investment costs.

      The renewable revolution arrives

      The renewable energy revolution has arrived spectacularly. UN Secretary-General António Guterres announced in summer 2025 that $2 trillion went into clean energy: $800 billion more than fossil fuels.

      Solar costs have fallen 41 per cent below fossil fuels, offshore wind 53 per cent. By 2024, one-third of global electricity came from renewables. The sector now employs 35 million people, exceeding fossil fuel employment.

      Distribution remains inequitable. For every 100 renewable installations globally, 80 are in wealthy countries and China, fewer than 2 in Africa.

      Africa possesses extraordinary potential, with projections suggesting it could produce ten times its electricity needs from renewables by 2040.

      China has become the dominant partner, manufacturing 80 per cent of solar panels, 70 per cent of wind turbines, and 60 per cent of electric vehicles globally.

      Emerging economies increasingly favour renewables for development. India has surged from under 20 megawatts of solar in 2010 to over 100,000 megawatts today.

      Europe demonstrates transition feasibility, with renewable energy dropping the energy sector's emissions share from nearly 40 per cent to below 20 per cent. Poland saw renewables overtake coal in June 2025.

      Fossil fuels resist retreat

      Fossil fuel resistance remains formidable. Coal still provides the world's largest energy source.

      China generates 60 per cent of its electricity from coal without clear signals for phase-out. India builds new coal plants whilst South Africa has slowed coal decommissioning despite accepting $8.5 billion to accelerate it.

      New hydrocarbon developments continue. Countries cite development needs whilst Brazil's petroleum revenues remain essential for public finances.

      The Trump administration has reversed American climate action, encouraging oil drilling with "drill baby, drill" rhetoric.

      Oil companies promote "climate realism", arguing emissions increases are inevitable, though economic data increasingly favour renewables over unprofitable fracking.

      Energy efficiency and sufficiency remain inadequately addressed. "We cannot rely solely on decarbonised supply but the question of energy demand must also arise", warned Michel Colombier of IDDRI.

      These questions are becoming central to avoiding unbearable transition costs.

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      43 min
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