‘Underwhelming’: China’s new climate target falls far short, experts say

Climate experts criticize China’s new pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as “disappointing” and “underwhelming.” They warn that the pledge falls far short of the steps required to prevent a global warming.

However, the objective also raised concerns that China, which has so far only committed to lowering emissions, might eventually be able to achieve much more ambitious reductions as a result of a significant increase in renewable energy capacity.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping stated in a video message to the UN on Wednesday that China would reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 7 to 10% from their all-time highs by 2035.

China, the biggest pollutant in the world, set out a goal to completely reduce emissions for the first time.

Xi also pledged to increase wind and solar capacity by sixfold in 2020 and increase the share of non-fossil fuel sources in energy consumption by more than 30%.

While China’s goal falls far short of the Paris Agreement’s goals, according to some analysts, which is a significant moment in the global fight against climate change at a time when the United States is giving up efforts to reduce emissions.

This target will not reduce emissions, according to Bill Hare, CEO of Berlin-based policy institute Climate Analytics, who stated to Al Jazeera, “which is regrettable very disappointing.”

China’s performance far exceeds its highest possible ambition, and it hardly reflects this.

According to the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), China would need to reduce emissions in accordance with the Paris Agreement by about 30%.

The average global temperature must not rise above pre-industrial levels in accordance with the agreement, which was signed by 195 nations in 2015.

Following President Donald Trump’s exit from the Paris Agreement, which China has criticized as “the greatest con ever committed on the world,” in his UN speech this week, China’s actions on climate are viewed as particularly crucial.

Chinese President Xi Jinping reportedly addresses a UN headquarters on September 24, 2025.

Li Shuo, director of the China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, stated on Al Jazeera that “China’s underwhelming headline target misses a chance to deliver real leadership.”

When science demands a full sprint, Beijing is “choosing to tiptoe forward.” Unfortunately, the pledge would still lead to disastrous climate effects for the world.

Important issues with the emissions target, such as how Beijing would define peak emissions, were left unanswered by Xi’s announcement.

Many climate experts think that China’s emissions have reached or will exceed the previous year’s high, but some observers think that the trend has been influenced by both the decline in business activity during the COVID-19 pandemic and the development of renewable energy.

China’s efforts to combat climate change have had a paradoxical impact.

The nation is a leader in green energy, accounting for roughly one-third of the world’s emissions.

According to the International Energy Agency, China produces 70% of its electric cars and about 80% of the world’s solar panels.

According to London-based energy think tank Ember, the nation also produces about 60% of wind turbines worldwide.

solar
On July 2, 2018, in Zhangjiakou, Hebei province, China, solar panels and wind turbines are pictured on a barren mountain.

China has continued to make significant investments in coal at the same time.

The CREA reported that nearly 100 gigawatts (GW) of new or suspended coal power projects were being constructed last year, which is the most in a decade.

“China’s new pledge clearly falls short of what was anticipated. The country has just approved more projects than it has ever done in nearly a decade, according to Andreas Sieber, associate director of policy and campaigns at 350.org, despite President Xi’s earlier pledge to strictly control new coal power.

The targets announced today, which are ambiguous on the base year and conservative on renewables, leave plenty of room for coal-heavy sectors to increase their emissions.

Climate experts expressed hope that China’s target could be a&nbsp, a sign of further transformative change.

Beijing has a tendency to set goals that it can “confidently deliver,” according to Yao Zhe, a Beijing-based policy adviser at Greenpeace East Asia, despite the announcement’s undercrowding.

According to Yao, “the actual decarbonization of China’s economy is likely to exceed its target on paper,” Yao said in a statement in response to the target. According to her organization, emissions from China’s power sector could reach peak this year.

China is more effective than most to encourage climate change, according to Li of the Asia Society.

The nation has come out as a global clean tech superpower, and its dominance in the field might help it surpass its current goals, he said.

Indonesia’s thrifty window shoppers cast doubt on economic success story

Medan, Indonesia – Delima, a sales representative in Indonesia’s fourth-largest city, used to collapse the moment she got home after spending the whole day on her feet serving customers.

But recently, Delima, who works at a cosmetics store in one of Medan’s upscale malls, has felt like she has “nothing to do”.

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“The mall is so quiet now, and when customers do come into the store, they have no intention of buying anything. They just use all the free testers, especially perfume, and then leave,” she told Al Jazeera.

Delima’s experience reflects “Rohana” and “Rojali”, the latest buzzwords to sweep Indonesian social media, in action.

“Rohana” and “Rojali”, portmanteaus of the Indonesian for “groups who just ask” and “groups who rarely buy”, have emerged as popular internet slang terms to describe the phenomenon of people who visit malls purely to engage in window shopping.

While it is difficult to put a precise figure on Indonesia’s window shoppers, there are signs that many Indonesians are tightening their belts as they find their rupiah going less far than in the past.

PT Unilever Indonesia, which produces everyday products ranging from ice cream to shampoo and toothpaste, saw its sales decline nearly 4.5 percent in the first half of 2025.

PT Matahari Department Store, which operates a chain of stores selling clothes, household appliances and beauty products, saw a steeper drop of more than 9 percent.

People walk through a connecting bridge to shopping malls in Jakarta, Indonesia, on October 10, 2021 [Adek Berry/AFP]

Tulus Abadi, the chairman of the Indonesian Consumers Foundation, said discussions of “Rohana” and “Rojali” reflect real shifts in people’s material circumstances.

“Transactions at shopping centres are dropping significantly. Sales of private cars and motorcycles are also declining,” he told Al Jazeera.

“This indicates that middle-class consumers are experiencing a decline in purchasing power. Yet, it is the middle class that is the driving force of the economy.”

On paper, Southeast Asia’s largest economy has been in good shape of late. Gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 5.12 percent year-on-year in the April-June period, according to the Indonesian Bureau of Statistics, the fastest pace in two years and ahead of economists’ forecasts.

Still, economic discontent among Indonesians is not hard to find, erupting most visibly in deadly protests that swept the archipelago in late August.

Thousands of Indonesians took to the streets in cities across the country to protest against budget cuts to education, public works and healthcare, as well as the introduction of a monthly housing allowance for lawmakers worth about $3,000 – almost 10 times Indonesia’s monthly minimum wage.

In a survey published by the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore in January, young Indonesians expressed markedly more pessimistic attitudes about the economy and the government than their peers in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Vietnam.

Whereas an average of 75 percent of respondents expressed optimism about the government’s economic plans across the six countries, only about 58 percent of Indonesian youth felt the same, according to the poll.

About 16 percent of the more than 44 million Indonesians aged 15-24 are out of work, according to government statistics – more than double the rate of neighbouring Thailand and Vietnam.

Government officials have downplayed suggestions that Rohana and Rojali reflect real-life conditions.

Speaking at a news conference in Jakarta last month, Chief Economic Affairs Minister Airlangga Hartarto said spending habits were simply moving online, pointing to rising household consumption among other positive data.

“The narrative around Rojali and Rohana is being blown out of proportion,” Airlangga said.

Airlangga Hartarto
Airlangga Hartarto, Indonesia’s chief economic affairs minister, speaks during an interview at his office in Jakarta, Indonesia, on August 26, 2025 [Willy Kurniawan/Reuters]

Teguh Yudo Wicaksono, an economics lecturer at Universitas Islam Indonesia, said official economic data painted a complex picture.

While household consumption grew nearly 5 percent in the second quarter, retail sales weakened slightly, though remaining higher than the same period last year, Wicaksono said.

“So, what can we conclude from this indicator? I think there may indeed be a weakening of purchasing power, but this may be occurring in certain segments,” he said.

Wicaksono said while weakened purchasing power could be at play, consumers also appeared to be shifting their spending patterns.

“People are starting to increase spending related to sports, hobbies, and entertainment. Some are spending on services,” he said.

“The proportion of this increase in spending has almost doubled, and this is happening primarily in the lower-middle-class segment. As a result, the portion of spending in other groups has decreased, especially for certain types of goods. This is what we perceive as the Rohana and Rojali phenomenon.”

Abadi of the Indonesian Consumers Foundation said the growing popularity of internet shopping had contributed to the Rohana-Rojali trend.

“The digital economy has rendered malls merely a means of window shopping,” he said.

In an online survey conducted earlier this year by Snapcart, a platform for analysing consumer behaviour based on customer receipts, half of the Indonesian respondents said they viewed online shopping as more practical than visiting brick-and-mortar shopping centres.

Shopee was the most popular platform, used by 90 percent of online shoppers, followed by Tokopedia, Lazada and Alfa Gift, according to the survey.

mall
Indonesian shoppers roam around a mall in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 14, 2008 [Jewel Samad/AFP]

Dewi Fauna, an admin assistant for an overseas client, said she had begun to embody the Rohana and Rojali phenomenon due to budget concerns and the convenience of e-commerce.

“I only go to the mall to eat in the restaurants and I rarely buy anything, mostly because of the price, and there are not as many options,” she told Al Jazeera.

“I don’t like to look around from one store to another just to find one item. With the same quality, you can get cheaper if you shop online.”

Fauna said she enjoys frequenting malls for the social aspect that they can provide.

“I go with friends or with my husband. I never go alone to the mall because the purpose of going to the mall, for me, is having fun with friends, and chatting while eating,” Fauna said.

Denmark shuts second airport in a week, more ‘unidentified’ drones spotted

Aalborg airport in Denmark, which serves both commercial and military flights, was closed as a result of an unidentified drone’s operation in its airspace, which comes a day after the country’s main Copenhagen airport was forced to temporarily close due to drone sightings.

Danish police reported early on Thursday that “more than one” drones had been spotted close to the Jutland region’s airport, which is Denmark’s fourth-largest city by population, near Aalborg airport.

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A number of large, unidentified drones were spotted close to one of Scandinavia’s busiest airports on Monday, prompting police to say the drone sightings in Aalborg followed a pattern similar to the ones that temporarily halted flights at Copenhagen Airport for four hours on Monday.

Due to its use as a military base, Danish armed forces were impacted by the closure of Aalborg airport, according to police.

A police official told the Reuters news agency, “It is too early to say what the drones’ intentions are and who is the actor behind them.” He added that authorities would try to remove them as soon as they could.

The Danish armed forces did not go on to further comment, but instead stated that they were helping local and national police with the investigation.

Later on Thursday morning, police announced that the drones had left Aalborg’s airspace and had also been reported in the vicinity of airports in the west of the country, including Esbjerg, Sonderborg, and Skrydstrup.

The F-16 and F-35 fighter jets from Denmark’s base in southern Jutland are called “basis” at Fighter Wing Skrydstrup.

Translation: The unidentified drones that were spotted in northern Jutland are no longer operating over Aalborg Airport. The police are conducting an in-depth investigation, and they want to speak with anyone with information about the case by dialing 114.

Northern Jutland police claimed that “more than one drone” had been seen flying with lights on near the Aalborg airport.

According to police, the drones were first spotted on Wednesday night around 9:44 p.m. [19:44 GMT] and remained in the airspace for a while.

Due to drone activity in the area, Eurocontrol, which manages European air traffic control, announced arrivals and departures at Aalborg Airport would be “zero rate” until 04:00 GMT on Thursday.

Police in Northern Jutland were unable to specify the kind of drones or whether they were identical to those that were seen over Copenhagen Airport on Monday.

Authorities in Denmark attributed the incident at Copenhagen Airport to a number of alleged Russian drone incursions and other disruptions throughout Europe, calling it the most serious attack on the country’s critical infrastructure.

Following a drone sighting, Norwegian authorities temporarily closed the Oslo airport’s airspace for three hours on Monday evening.

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen stated in a statement on Tuesday that she “cannot in any way reject the possibility that Russia” is to blame for the incident at Copenhagen Airport.

The European Commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, stated on social media that “while the facts are still being established, it is obvious we are witnessing a pattern of persistent contestation at our borders.”

She claimed that “our crucial infrastructure is in danger.” And Europe will be strong and determined in overcoming this threat.

Russian drones are “guided by international regulations in all their flights and do not violate them in any way,” according to Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for the Kremlin.

Poland’s military reported that after Russian drones repeatedly violated Polish airspace, it closed four of its airports, including one in Warsaw, earlier this month.

In the wake of the drone attack in Poland, NATO members have pledged to strengthen their borders while reaffirming their allegiance.

A day after the military shot down Russian drones that were in violation of Polish airspace, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk thanked the pilots at the 32nd Tactical Air Base. [Marian Zubrzycki/EPA]

Ukraine, Syria restore diplomatic ties after breakdown during Assad regime

Following his meeting with interim Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that their leaders had formally resumed diplomatic relations with Syria as they convened on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

According to a brief statement from the Syrian Foreign Ministry, Asaad al-Shaibani and an accompanying delegation also attended the meeting on Wednesday in New York.

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After Bashar al-Assad’s government moved to declare the “independence” of the Russian-backed breakaway republics Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine, Ukraine severed diplomatic ties with Syria in 2022. Syria made a statement shortly after that it would renounce its relationship with Kyiv.

According to Zelenskyy, Syria and Ukraine both signed a letter requesting the restoration of diplomatic ties.

The Ukrainian leader wrote on X that “we welcome this significant step and are ready to support the Syrian people on their way to stability.”

Zelenskyy said, “We also discussed in detail promising areas for developing cooperation, security threats faced by both countries, and the importance of countering them,” during our discussions with the president of Syria, Ahmed al-Sharaa.

The Ukrainian leader claimed that the two countries had agreed to “build our relations on the basis of mutual respect and trust.”

Al-Sharaa arrived in New York on Sunday with a delegation of ministers to attend the UN General Assembly, marking Syria’s first presidential participation in the annual gathering in nearly 60 years.

Following the Arab-Israeli conflict in 1967, when Israel occupied the Golan Heights in southwest Syria, Damascus had canceled the gathering.

The last head of state from 1966 to 1970 to represent Syria at the UN summit was President Nureddin al-Atassi.

After the opposition forces overthrew President al-Assad’s regime, al-Sharaa took control of Damascus in January, putting an end to the Assad family’s five-decade rule over Syria.

Al-Sharaa demanded that the UNGA’s inaugural speech on Wednesday, which was his first one.

Israel kills 85 people in Gaza despite calls for truce from world leaders

Seven women and two children were among the injured in a strike on a stadium in the Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza, killing at least 12 Palestinians, as Israel continued to launch its attacks despite international leaders’ requests for a ceasefire at the UN General Assembly.

Another massacre took place on Wednesday at the al-Ahli Stadium, which has been converted into a temporary abode for Palestinians fleeing the Israeli siege.

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“My hand was the only thing I had,” I said. Najwa, a woman from Gaza City who has fled with nothing, told Al Jazeera. We fear fear. Costs are high for transportation. We are unable to pay for the transportation of our items.

“Inflicting terror”

At least 85 Palestinians were killed across the territory on Wednesday, more than twice the number of those killed yesterday as Israel’s assault on Gaza grew overnight.

Israeli military chief of staff Eyal Zamir claimed Palestinians were being pushed south “for their safety” as the UN warned that Israel’s military was “inflicting terror on the Palestinian population of Gaza City and forcing tens of thousands of people to flee.”

However, those claims have been refuted by UN investigators. This week, a commission of inquiry determined that Israel’s actions are intended to guarantee the Jewish majority in the occupied West Bank and within Israel while maintaining permanent control over Gaza.

Zamir added that the army “will continue a systematic and thorough advance” into the enclave’s largest urban center, noting that “the majority of Gaza’s population has already left Gaza City.”

At least 65 Palestinians have died and 167, 160 have been injured since the start of the conflict on October 7, 2023, with thousands more thought to be buried beneath the rubble. After 1, 139 people were killed in Israel as a result of a Hamas-led attack in October 2023, Israel launched what activists claim is a “war of vengeance.” More than 40 of the 200 captives are still in Gaza, up from the 200 that the Palestinian fighters took.

Condemnation at the UN

Leaders from all over the world have condemned Israel’s war against Gaza at the UN General Assembly in New York, dominating proceedings.

The name of a human cannot be associated with it, according to Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian to world leaders. These criminals will never be able to turn out to be trustworthy partners because they bully children by killing them.

The people of Gaza, its children and women, and all other peoples who are a target of violence, demanded the president of Syria, Ahmad al-Sharaa, saying, “We stand firmly with them.” We demand that the war be ended right away.

Espen Barth Eide, the foreign minister of Norway, reported to Al Jazeera that “recent discussions are taking place on ending the conflict,” citing the “New York Declaration” roadmap that 142 states endorsed in July.

“Those of us who are closest to the Israeli position are beginning to realize that we can’t just continue this pointless, pointless war, including the United States,” he said.

Palestinian displaced people flee northern Gaza through Wadi Gaza on Wednesday, September 24, 2025, and a smoke cloud appears over Gaza City as a result of an Israeli airstrike.

Meanwhile, US special envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed that world leaders had received President Donald Trump’s 21-point peace plan and that Washington was “hopeful… even confident that in the coming days we’ll be able to announce some sort of breakthrough.”

However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had previously opposed peace proposals. Hamas leaders were gathering in Doha earlier this month to discuss a Trump peace proposal. Netanyahu ordered their assassination.

On March 18, the Israeli leader unilaterally withdrawn from the most recent ceasefire agreement, launched fierce airstrikes, and placed a total aid blockade, leading to starvation and famine. The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant for his crimes against humanity.

Protests have erupted in Tel Aviv as Israel’s isolation grows more severe. As Netanyahu left for the UN meeting, hundreds of people gathered at the Ben Gurion airport to express their disapproval.

Senegal: Gaza has ‘become hell for thousands of souls’

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Bassirou Diomaye Faye, president of Senegal, blasted the conflict in Gaza at the 80th UNGA, calling it a “humanitarian catastrophe” and urging immediate global response. He reaffirmed the legitimacy of Palestinians and demanded fairer, more equal government in accordance with international law.