The highlights of Cop-26: What happens when?
Police officers walk passed the Scottish Event Campus in Glasgow where Cop26 is being held.
World leaders, politicians, negotiators, business chiefs and campaigners have gathered in Glasgow for the two-week UN Cop26 climate summit.
Here are some of the highlights of what is happening.
The UN Cop26 meeting formally begins, kicking off the two weeks of negotiations aimed at driving action on climate change and delivering on the world's comprehensive climate treaty, the Paris Agreement.
The two-day world leaders summit begins, with around 120 heads of state and government due to attend.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will host an opening ceremony attended by dignitaries including the Prince of Wales, and both will give speeches to leaders.
World leaders will then set out the action they are taking, in national statements, with US President Joe Biden, German chancellor Angela Merkel, Canada's Justin Trudeau and Scott Morrison from Australia set to speak on Monday afternoon.
Other leaders, including Japan's prime minister Fumio Kishida and Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin will speak on Tuesday.
Alongside leaders' speeches, there will be events with Mr Johnson and other heads of state and government on protecting forests and using land more sustainably, and green energy and infrastructure.
British Chancellor Rishi Sunak will kick off the "finance day" of the conference with an event marking progress on delivering a target $100 billion (€860m) climate finance commitment, mobilising private finance, and "resetting" the financial sector to support action.
Energy day at the talks will focus on phasing out coal and driving the switch to green energy.
Friday is youth day at Cop26, while out on the streets young people will take part in the School Strike for Climate, marching through Glasgow.
Campaigners take to the streets again, with marches in Glasgow, London and other British cities.
Meanwhile it is nature day at Cop26, so there will be focus by campaigners and businesses on how protecting the natural world can boost wildlife and avert the climate crisis.
Environment, energy and climate ministers will attend the talks for the high-level ministerial section of negotiations in the second week of the conference.
Theme days continue in the second week, with the focus variously on gender, science and innovation, transport, and cities.
The talks are due to finish.
But with tricky negotiations on a number of issues and efforts to get countries to agree a road map towards increasing ambition on cutting emissions in the next decade, it is likely they will overrun.
Climate talks always do.




