Climate

Consensus eludes climate talks over finance and transparency

Progress in the first week of COP24 has been painfully slow, as a logjam over money threatens to unravel previous advances
<p>Poorer countries say&nbsp;rich countries should pay more to deal with the&nbsp;impacts of&nbsp;heat waves, droughts, storms and&nbsp;floods (Image: cop24.gov.pl&nbsp;)</p>

Poorer countries say rich countries should pay more to deal with the impacts of heat waves, droughts, storms and floods (Image: cop24.gov.pl )

The Paris Agreement will not come into effect on schedule in 2020 if negotiators continue to bicker as they have done during the first week of the December 2-14 UN climate summit in Katowice, Poland.

In the past few weeks, global scientists (the IPCC) have warned of the dangers of inaction; global doctors (the WTO) have described the diseases worsened by climate change and how these will deteriorate; and the UN has reported the ever-widening gap between current emissions and the level to which they need to be brought down.

Meanwhile, from Kerala to California, from Odisha to Australia, storms, droughts and wildfires aggravated by climate change have killed people and devastated economies.

But the real world still cannot penetrate the bubble that is the annual summit of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), in which bureaucrats negotiate ad nauseam over which country will do how much and pay how much. They have been at it since 1995, and the situation has worsened with the election of Donald Trump as US president. His delegates are determined to play spoiler.

As the US vacates the climate leadership space, instead choosing to stymie talks at Katowice, China and India have been hesitant to step into the breach.

“We would let our actions speak rather than our words,” India’s environment minister Harsh Vardhan told chinadialogue while discussing the leadership issue. “We are in favour of a balanced agreement,” said Arun Kumar Mehta, India’s head of delegation.

China has been similarly cautious in its public statements. Xie Zhenhua, China’s special representative for climate change, declined to comment on specific issues facing the Katowice summit. “We will meet your (India’s) minister and take stock of the situation,” he said.

Paris rulebook

The signing of the Paris Agreement at the 2015 summit was a rare bright moment in this process. But the agreement cannot come into effect on schedule in 2020 without a rulebook. And at present the negotiators, from 195 governments, cannot agree on the critical parts of it. It remains to be seen if their environment ministers — expected to arrive in droves during the second week of the Katowice summit — can do better.

Past summits do not provide much reason for hope. The Kyoto Protocol — predecessor to the Paris Agreement — was signed in 1997 but came into effect only in 2005.

Developing countries must push for a strong rulebook

 

As the first week of the summit closed on Friday 7th December, the issue of transparency remained the biggest stumbling block. Industrialised countries want developing countries to report on all their efforts to “go green”.

Developing countries say they cannot start planning to go green (decarbonise) until they know how much money they will receive from rich countries. Industrialised countries refuse to name a figure. And so the logjam continues.

“The success of the Paris Agreement hinges on finance,” Harjeet Singh, global lead on climate change for international non-profit ActionAid, told chinadialogue. “We need clear rules governing climate finance.”

The good news is that climate finance is being mobilised, mostly from private funds. Large developing countries are getting it but not the smallest and the poorest, which often have the least bankable projects. That is where public finance can play the vital guarantor’s role, but there is no information on how much public finance will be available. Latin America, one of the most vulnerable regions to the effects of climate change, has been asking throughout the week for a larger commitment by developed countries on funding.

The transparency logjam may undo progress made on other issues. Developing countries hit by heat waves, droughts, storms, floods, rising sea level have persuaded rich countries to resurrect the once-bankrupt Adaptation Fund, so that they can seek some money to deal with these impacts. However, there is still no agreement on how this section will read in the Paris rulebook, largely due to opposition by US government delegates. Despite Trump’s declaration that his country will pull out of the Paris Agreement, the US cannot legally do so until 2020.

Loss and damage

For impacts that are beyond adaptation, the issue of loss and damage caused by climate change has been brought to the fore in the teeth of opposition from the US and Saudi Arabia. Compensation for such loss and damage is still a distant dream, but a start has been made by a training programme for the poorest countries on how to deal better with such disasters.

“We do not yet have all the answers on how to address loss and damage and how to finance the needs of poor countries, but we must start acting now. Developed countries committed to the Paris Agreement, like the European Union, New Zealand and Canada, must work proactively with vulnerable, developing countries to jointly push for a strong rulebook, rather than hide behind the inaction of the US," said Sven Harmeling, global policy lead on Climate Change and Resilience, CARE International.

There was progress on the vexed question of the transfer of “green technologies”, with poorer countries exempted from paying full patent costs.

Bickering over a word

The prognosis can only be as gloomy as the rainy winter sky in this coal-mining town, ringed by thermal power plants. The world has been jolted by the special report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) this October, which pointed out in graphic detail the dangers of global average temperature rise beyond 1.5 degrees Celsius from preindustrial levels.

But the negotiators could not even agree on whether they “welcomed” the report or “noted” it. All developing countries and the European Union wanted to welcome, but this was opposed by the US, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Russia.

The US delegation said, “The IPCC’s acceptance of the report does not imply that the US endorsed it.” Teary-eyed pleas from at least one developing country delegate failed to move the spoilers.

More ambition?

It is now clear that the pledges made by countries for the Paris Agreement will not keep global temperature rise within the agreed two-degree limit. It is probably leading to a three-degree warmer world, a fearful prospect given the current impacts in a world one degree warmer.

Governments have been asked to ratchet up their ambitions in what is so far an informal process called the Talanoa Dialogue. In the formal UNFCCC process, there is provision for a global stocktake of Paris Agreement pledges in 2023.

During the first week of the current summit, delegates could not even agree on the modalities of this exercise, let alone on increasing ambitions. Developing countries want differentiation with developed countries, while the US strenuously opposes it.

There is no consensus among developing countries either. The poorest among them, as well as the small island nations, want stronger climate action, while larger economies such as those of China, India, Brazil and South Africa oppose it on the grounds that if the Paris Agreement unravels, it will be difficult to come to any agreement at all. In the meantime, most climate pledges are still considered insufficient to reach the Paris Agreement targets.

Among industrialised countries, the European Union is on a completely different page to the US but is scared to say so openly, especially in light of the recent riots in Paris against fuel price hikes and the pro-coal position of summit host Poland.

Using the recent riots in France as an excuse, Trump tweeted that the Paris Agreement was “ridiculous” and “extremely expensive,” calling for its end.

As delegates left the summit venue late on Saturday night, one wondered, “What will happen to the whole Paris Agreement [rulebook] if we had so much trouble over one word — 'welcome'.”