Yeah, the European Union is also good. For the first time in 2024, solar energy in the EU surpassed coal in generating electricity across all 27 EU member states, while natural gas production of electricity fell for the fifth year running.
In the European Union (EU), 47% of electricity now comes from renewable sources like wind and solar, a new record according to a report from the think tank Ember. This is a far higher percentage than in other countries, including the United States and China, where about two-thirds of energy comes from fossil fuels such as oil, coal, and gas.
As I said, tthe narrative that China as leading the path to a better climate is simply wrong. China’s track record regarding the fight against climate change is -very much as those of most other larger countries- an absolute disaster: https://climateactiontracker.org/countries/china
That’s an oversimplification of the article. It’s not that “we should burn fossil fuels.” China should rather stop burning them.
China’s measures to fight climate change are highly insufficient as per practically all independent metrics, and the Chinese government doesn’t appear to be even willing to reduce its emissions. It keeps on to produce a massive amount of overcapacity to to flood the world (and especially the global south) with cheap products for geopolitical and economic gains.
Only 16 countries globally submitted NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) on time. These include the UK, Switzerland, Montenegro, and Andorra from Europe, the others are Canada, Japan, New Zealand, and some smaller countries like the Marshall Islands and the Maldives.
Some of the world’s largest emitters failed to submit new NDCs. These include not only the EU but also China, India and Russia.
As you can see from the links, none of them is on track.