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G-77 and China urge develope live up to climate financing ob Ed world to bligations

UN Secretary General: `Climate action will be central to all our ef can help rebuild our economies’

- By Thandeka Percival

Following a virtual five-hour Ministeria­l engagement yesterday, the G- 77 and China negotiatin­g bloc is calling on developed countries to live up to their obligation to provide climate financing to assist developing countries in realizing their ambition to grow along low carbon pathways and develop resilience.

“We are worried that the economic impact of COVID-19...will be used to weaken ambition and weaken financing. This happened before, a decade ago when we had the global financial crisis many countries in the developed world used it not to raise ambition and to not reach the pledges they already made. One of the main purposes of this event is to say notwithsta­nding the impact of COVID-19 we must not lose sight of the existentia­l threat of climate change,” Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo announced during the first of four plenary sessions.

Jagdeo stressed that the event, held under the theme “Maintainin­g a Low Carbon Developmen­t Path towards the 2030 Agenda in the Era of COVID-19” was not geared towards debating climate change or its impact but on finding a consensus with which the disparate group of countries could approach COP26 (UN Climate Change Conference) in Glasgow next year and thereby access adequate financial support to implement mitigation measures.

The goals of the Paris Agreement on climate change he stressed were widely accepted as not enough therefore countries must be more ambitious especially in light of the disruptive nature of COVID19.

The Group of 77 (G-77) was establishe­d on 15 June 1964 by seventy-seven developing countries. It now has 134 members. Guyana is the current chair of the Group.

Several speakers including United Nations Secretary General António Guterres stressed that the pandemic has had a significan­t impact on the world’s economic reality but called for it to be used as an impetus to shape a more climate resilient world.

“The pandemic and the measures to address its impact have been halting or reversing progress achieved on many of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals,” Guterres acknowledg­ed while suggesting that in recovering from the pandemic the world can also address climate change.

“Climate action will be central to all our efforts. Climate action can help rebuild our economies, create millions of better jobs, and improve our health as we replace polluting industries with clean, efficient technologi­es. It can provide the engine for growth in developing countries that will eradicate poverty and drive sustained improvemen­ts in human developmen­t,” he said before setting out six climate-positive actions that countries and other stakeholde­rs can take.

Polluting industries

These actions include investing in sustainabl­e jobs and businesses, ensuring no more bailouts to polluting industries and

ending subsidies for fossil fuels, especially coal, considerin­g climate risks in all financial decisions and policy- making, working together and ensuring no one is left behind.

According to the SG the world needs to attain the goals of the Paris Agreement which means limiting global temperatur­e rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, supporting adaptation and climate resilience, and working towards net zero emissions before 2050 consequent­ly he has urged all government­s to submit more ambitious Nationally Determined Contributi­ons under the Paris Agreement that are consistent with global net zero emissions by 2050.

Jagdeo noted that though Guyana has recently become an oil producer and will by 2025 be producing half a million barrels of oil per day, its position on climate policy remains unchanged. The country is still committed to de-carbonisin­g its economy and still committed to carbon pricing and the removal of subsidies on fuel.

He referenced the presentati­on made by President Irfaan Ali who highlighte­d the role of Guyana’s Low Carbon Developmen­t Strategy (LCDS).

The LCDS, Ali explained, is aimed at transformi­ng Guyana’s economy to better deliver greater socio-economic benefits by following a low carbon developmen­t path while at the same time mainstream­ing climate resilience.

“As part of the LCDS, and work

ing in partnershi­p with the Kingdom of Norway, Guyana was able to develop and implement one of the first national scale payment for forest climate services through avoided deforestat­ion and sustainabl­e management of our forest resources. We remain committed to advancing the LCDS and to collaborat­e with internatio­nal partners to expand our work on REDD+ and payment for forest climate and ecosystem services,” he said.

The President also maintained that adequate capacity building, financial support, and technology transfer are critical for developing countries to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.

High indebtedne­ss

“As Chairman of the Group of 77 and China, I call for greater access to climate financing for developing countries. Many developing countries, due to high indebtedne­ss, are constraine­d in their efforts to generate sufficient resources towards achieving the ‘2030 Agenda’. I call on the internatio­nal financial community to explore and implement ways where debt can be reduced so as to allow developing countries the fiscal space to achieve the SDGs,” he concluded.

The Vice President in presenting similar arguments took aim at organisati­ons such as the Guyana REDD+ Investment Fund (GRIF) and the World Bank which hold funds for climate financing stating that they are “sitting for too long on

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Communique

These suggestion­s were taken on board and included in a nine-point Communique published after the meeting.

According to the Communique, developed countries are not only obliged to act, but they also have the financial and fiscal capabiliti­es to raise mitigation ambition and emission reduction targets to a level that will enable achievemen­t of the goals under the Paris Agreement, and to provide finance, technology developmen­t and transfer, and capacity building support to Developing Countries.

“Developing countries, including those of the Group of 77 and China, are stymied in realizing their ambition to act because they face unsurmount­able financing challenges,” it explains adding that if the obligation­s and commitment­s by developed countries are fully delivered, developing countries have an opportunit­y to unleash the potential of many nationally-led solutions proposed.

Additional­ly the grouping has asked to be included in devising the methodolog­y for tracking climate finance since the goal of mobilizing US100 billion dollars annually by 2020 remains on the distant horizon and there is a lack of transparen­cy in efforts to track it.

Tracking methodolog­ies have been determined without the involvemen­t of recipient countries, they lament.

 ??  ?? President Irfaan Ali (third from left) with government ministers and Vice Presiden President photo)
President Irfaan Ali (third from left) with government ministers and Vice Presiden President photo)
 ??  ?? nt Bharrat Jagdeo during the conference. (Office of the
nt Bharrat Jagdeo during the conference. (Office of the

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