Leeds at COP26: Our climate experts address global leaders

Date

Leeds climate researchers working to tackle the environmental crisis and help the world achieve net zero carbon emissions are preparing to address 200 world leaders at COP26. 

Known in full as the 26th United Nations (UN) Climate Change Conference of the Parties, COP is a yearly summit where leaders negotiate a response to global climate change. 

This event is widely considered the last best chance for leaders to negotiate the way forward in tackling the climate crisis.  

The conference, which starts at the weekend in Glasgow, presents an opportunity to steer our path away from a dangerous temperature rise towards the agreed target of limiting global heating to 1.5°C, and with it, a shift to a fairer, cleaner, healthier world in which to live. 

Research and innovation from the Leeds is contributing to important discussions and negotiations taking place in the run up to, and at, COP26. The conference is divided into two zones: Blue and Green. The Blue Zone is open only to government officials and accredited organisations and individuals, including 13 Leeds researchers. Key negotiations will take place in the Blue Zone, as well as a range of events, talks and presentations from governments, businesses and institutions including Leeds on their work to tackle climate change. 

The Green Zone is open to the public, where organisations can showcase their efforts to address the climate crisis. Here Leeds delegates will take part in a range of public-facing activities, and will lead a number of fringe events. 

Jane Francis on a boat in Antarctica

Leeds Chancellor Professor Dame Jane Francis

Professor Dame Jane Francis, British Antarctic Survey Director and Chancellor of the University, will lead a panel discussion on Empowering policymakers with informed scientific knowledge, exploring how lessons from the pandemic can be applied to help address the climate crisis. The event is on Wednesday 10 November at 10-11.30am GMT and will be live-streamed online. Places can be booked via eventbrite.

Several other Leeds events will be live-streamed online. Members of the public can register to attend via the University website. 

Leeds at COP26 

Leeds’ COP26 delegation includes researchers working across a range of disciplines, with the shared goal of tackling climate change. Among the attendees are: 

Piers Forster, Professor of Climate Physics and Director of Leeds’ Priestley International Centre for Climate, will represent the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to brief high level negotiations. He will also showcase the latest climate science through the Leeds-led CONSTRAIN EU research project, and will meet with other national climate council representatives on behalf of the UK Climate Change Committee to share and learn best practice.    

This year the IPCC produced a report observing that changes in the Earth's climate caused by human activity are being observed in every region and across the whole climate system. Professor Forster, co-ordinating lead author of the report, said: “The bad news is that a low level of future warming can now be ruled out.  

“But the good news is that if the world can substantially reduce emissions in the 2020s and get to net-zero CO2 emissions by 2050, temperature rise can still be limited to 1.5°C.” 

A head and shoulders shot of Professor Piers Forster stood behind a microphone on a stand.

Professor Piers Forster, Priestley International Centre for Climate Director

COP26 Research Fellow Harriet Thew will take part in discussions around climate education and youth empowerment in the Blue Zone, as well as several Green Zone events on education and youth participation. These include the world premiere of the Ripple Effect film, which was made by young people from the UK and South Africa about how climate change affects their lives now. 

Postgraduate researcher Heather Selley will address Blue Zone delegates, speaking about her research into fast flowing glaciers in the Getz region of West Antarctica. Heather’s 2021 paper showed that 14 glaciers in the Getz region are thinning and flowing more quickly into the ocean, adding to rising sea levels. 

Stephen Whitfield, Associate Professor of Climate Change and Food Security, and COP26 Research Fellow, will speak in the Blue Zone on developing climate-resilient food systems, using his research on approaches in sub-Saharan Africa.  

Dom Spracklen, Professor of Biosphere-Atmosphere Interactions, will address Blue Zone attendees on the environmental impact of peatland fires. Professor Spracklen is currently working on a project to restore 1,200 hectares of land in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales National Park, which will see the restoration of peatlands and the expansion of native woodland and scrub to remove and store carbon, helping to tackle the climate crisis. 

More information about all the delegates attending COP26 from the University is available on the Priestley Centre website

And an in-depth look at the breadth of climate research carried out by experts at Leeds, and how they are working to help the world achieve net zero emissions, is available on our website.

Learn more 

The University’s Policy Leeds group, which allows researchers to inform policy development by connecting them with policy professionals, is producing a series of blogs from Leeds academics on what policymakers need to know to take effective climate action.  

Leeds experts discuss how to create a circular economy; how to support SMEs’ climate adaption; how to galvanise climate action and why urban policymakers must act like it’s an emergency when responding to the climate crisis in our cities.  

Read them on the Policy Leeds website

History of COP 

World governments have met every year since 1995 to negotiate a response to global climate change. These 197 nations and territories, signatories to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, are represented at the Conference of the Parties (COP), responsible for reviewing the implementation of the Convention. This year will be the 26th meeting of the COP, hence COP26. 

The two-week conference in Glasgow will involve around 200 presidents and prime ministers and some 30,000 delegates reporting back on progress since the Paris Agreement and, hopefully, making some new decisions on how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and prepare for the impact that climate change is already having. 

Further information 

For media enquiries email University of Leeds Press Officer Lauren Ballinger at l.ballinger@leeds.ac.uk.