The Sun (Malaysia)

Disconnect between people and politician­s

- Ű BY ISABELLA KAMINSKI

INTERNATIO­NAL talks that aimed to take action to tackle climate change have left vulnerable nations, environmen­tal groups and young people across the world deeply disappoint­ed.

COP25, which was held in Madrid after a last-minute move from Chile, was intended to iron out the final details of the 2015 Paris Agreement and encourage countries to submit more ambitious national carboncutt­ing plans next year.

But a fraught negotiatio­n process, which highlighte­d the disparitie­s between poor and wealthy nations and between those willing and reticent to act, elicited growing anger as it went deep into extra time over the weekend.

Diplomats managed to agree on some issues in the final sleepdepri­ved 48 hours, including an updated gender action plan that recognises the impact of climate change on human rights, gender inequaliti­es and the importance of intersecti­onality.

And, despite numerous attempts to weaken it, the final agreement re-emphasised the “significan­t gap” between national promises to cut carbon and the amount that is actually needed to stave off dangerous warming.

But several key issues were deferred to next year’s summit in Glasgow.

A decision on internatio­nal carbon market rules proved intractabl­e as countries argued over the issue of double counting and whether to allow overperfor­mance in previous emission trading schemes to count towards future targets.

While business organisati­ons were disappoint­ed not to have a clearer idea of how carbon markets would work, some observers welcomed the postponeme­nt on the basis that no rules were better than bad ones.

Sébastien Duyck, senior attorney at the Centre for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law, said the final proposals had threatened to undermine human rights and would have been too weak to be truly effective in cutting emissions.

Countries agreed to do more work on the thorny issue of loss and damage but did not approve any new source of finance to compensate vulnerable countries for climate change.

Instead, part of the Green Climate Fund was siphoned off to deal with loss and damage, while organisati­ons and nations were “urged” to do more.

The US, which is due to leave the Paris Agreement next year, was singled out for obstructin­g progress on this issue.

Ian Fry, negotiator for the vulnerable island nation of Tuvalu, denounced the US’s attitude during the summit’s final meeting and said that “refusing to support those most impacted could constitute a crime against humanity”.

According to Climate Action Network Europe, which organised a string of NGO-led events during the two-week summit, the final outcome showed a “profound disconnect between people and politician­s on the climate emergency”.

As the talks wore on, thousands of protesters marched in the streets of Madrid and scientists warned that much more had to be done to keep global warming to a maximum of 1.5C.

Some directed their criticism squarely at the summit’s Chilean presidency.

Greenpeace Chile’s national director Matias Asun said: “Chile lost a perfect opportunit­y to show climate leadership. The real progress was made by people moving forward for real changes while pushing those who passively watching our environmen­t been destroyed.”

But Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation and a key architect of the Paris Agreement, said that while the results were “a far cry from what science tells us is needed”, it still achieved the “best possible outcome” thanks to a progressiv­e alliance of small island states, European, African and Latin American countries.

The UK will host the next internatio­nal summit in Glasgow in November 2020 and expectatio­ns will be high. – The Independen­t

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