Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

What makes the Bonn meet on climate critical

After the US withdrawal from the Paris deal, India needs to build a global agreement for more ambitious pledges

- AJAY MATHUR

India played a leading role at the Paris climate negotiatio­ns, and emerged as a prominent, constructi­ve and responsibl­e country in discussion­s and actions to address climate change. We were able to work with the rest of the world in defining a regime that aligned our national goals of enabling adequate and affordable energy for all with the global goal of mitigating global carbon emissions. Our innovative and ambitious steps to accelerate the adoption of renewables and energy efficiency, but at a pace and in a manner that matched the willingnes­s and ability of Indians to adopt these higher-cost options, played a big role in convincing ourselves, and the rest of the world, that this alignment is possible and achievable.

Now, at Bonn for the Conference of Parties (COP23), the second since Paris, we face a different world. The Obama administra­tion is gone, together with its aspiration­s of forging a legacy of climate action, and a willingnes­s to understand the concerns of others, including India.

Consequent­ly, as the modalities, procedures, and guidelines (MPGs) for the enhanced transparen­cy framework are negotiated at COP23, India will need to ensure that they are pragmatic. If it is too onerous, requiring large additional efforts with high transactio­ns costs beyond those required for national energy goals, then this alignment would be lost,

There is little hope that internatio­nal financial support will be available. Consequent­ly, as at Paris, India will need to be in the vanguard to cajole the world into agreeing to a regime, this time of the MPGs, that is robust enough to sustain the trust of countries in the actions of other countries, and flexible enough to be complied with in all countries, especially developing countries. An onerous MPG regime may not necessaril­y constrain our ability to meet our goals and pledges, but may certainly mean that our verified achievemen­ts may fall short of our actual achievemen­ts. This would strain the trust that was created at Paris, especially when it will come to the adoption of more ambitious goals.

Enhanced commitment­s is the second area in which India will need to build a global consensus at COP23. At stake is the process for the facilitati­ve dialogue, and on the actions that will flow from it. The facilitati­ve dialogue, planned for 2018, would serve as a precursor to the global stocktakin­g that is envisaged in the Paris agreement as a periodic review of the global impact of the climate-related actions of all countries. These reviews would help countries in determinin­g the enhanced commitment­s required to ensure that global temperatur­e rise remains well below 2ºC. These will help countries decide how much more ambitious the actions that they adopt and pledge should be. The first global stocktake is scheduled for 2023, with new pledges to be submitted by 2025. The facilitati­ve dialogue is seen as a ‘dress rehearsal’ for the global stocktake.

This means that we will need to coax an agreement on benchmarks to assess the progress on adaptation, which is of greater importance to India than to most developed countries. We will also need to build an agreement on the “whos” and the “hows” in the developmen­t of more ambitious pledges. Will, for example, developed countries enhance the ambition of their 2020 pledges as a result of the facilitati­ve dialogue? Will the principle of nationally determined pledges continue to apply as countries adopt more ambitious pledges? Or will the bulk of enhanced ambition fall on India, which is now the only major country where the bulk of energy (and consequent­ly greenhouse gas emissions) related infrastruc­ture is yet to be built?

Our domestic action on renewables, energy efficiency and afforestat­ion will determine whether we meet our Paris pledges on the reduction in our carbon intensity, increase in the share of non-fossil sources in our electricit­y-generation mix, and enhanced carbon capture by our forests and trees. However, the speed and extent of these actions will crucially depend on the agreements at COP23 as they will influence the depth to which the accelerato­r pedal for action is pressed.

ENHANCED COMMITMENT­S IS THE SECOND AREA IN WHICH INDIA WILL NEED TO BUILD A CONSENSUS AT COP23. AT STAKE IS THE PROCESS FOR THE FACILITATI­VE DIALOGUE, AND ON THE ACTIONS THAT WILL FLOW

Ajay Mathur is director general of TERI. He has been the Indian spokespers­on at the Paris negotiatio­ns The views expressed are personal

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