Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

COP25 cop-out sets clock back

Outcome leaves open how key sections of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement will work

- Bloomberg

MADRID: After two weeks of talks, envoys from almost 200 countries shelved work on adding market mechanisms as a tool to curb greenhouse gases, settling on a more limited set of measures to rein in climate change.

Delegates at a United Nations meeting in Madrid deadlocked for a second year in a row on how to create a system of credits for projects that would cut emissions. They also couldn’t agree on language about how to spur finance for green projects.

The result left open how key sections of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement will work when that deal comes into force next year.

Many envoys said that the decision to express an “urgent need” to make more ambitious cuts in fossil fuel emissions represents a step backward from previous deals.

“It’s not what the world had hoped for and what Europe would’ve hoped for,” said Karsten Sach, an official speaking for Germany at the meeting in Madrid. “We couldn’t agree on a market mechanism.”

The delegates from environmen­t and energy ministries stumbled over the details for a new market instrument to rein in pollution.

They were trying to work out how to prevent double counting of credits and integrate into the new system an existing mechanism that funnels at least $138 billion into green projects.

The impasse leaves companies that encouraged carbon trading, including the oil major Royal Dutch Shell Plc and the Spanish utility Iberdrola SA, with fewer price signals showing how quickly the cost of pollution is rising. “This is a huge disappoint­ment,” said Dirk Forrister, chief executive officer of the Internatio­nal Emissions Trading Associatio­n. “The fact is that countries’ ability to deliver stronger targets in line with net zero goals will depend on having access to internatio­nal market cooperatio­n.”

The meeting was meant to flesh out the last rules needed to implement the 2015 Paris Agreement, under which all nations promised steps to cut greenhouse gas pollution.

The delegates are working toward limiting the Earth’s average temperatur­e increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius since the start of the industrial revolution. Even that would be the biggest shift in the climate since the last ice age ended some 10,000 years ago, and scientists say rising temperatur­es are already lifting sea levels and causing more violent storms.

“The key polluting countries responsibl­e for 80% of the world’s climate-wrecking emissions stood mute while smaller countries announced they’ll work to drive down harmful emissions in the coming year,” said Jake Schmidt, who is following the talks for the Natural Resources Defense Council, a New Yorkbased research group.

While carbon markets were the main strand of discussion this year in Madrid, the most visible disagreeme­nt at the talks was over what the delegates call “ambition.” That relates to the voluntary commitment­s nations make toward cutting emissions.

The language adopted this year was so weak that for many envoys it marked a step backward from the Paris Agreement, under which nations agreed to offer deeper reductions every few years. The reversal, aided by President Donald Trump’s decision to back away from reductions the US had pledged in previous years, undermined the integrity of the talks.

“There is no sugarcoati­ng it: The negotiatio­ns fell far short of what was expected,” said Helen Mountford, vice president for climate and economics at the World Resources Institute, a U.S. research group. “Instead of leading the charge for more ambition, most of the large emitters were missing in action or obstructiv­e.”

From Egypt to Uruguay, Saudi Arabia and Malaysia, nations expressed concern there was no language in the decision about how to spur climate-related aid.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India