Business Day

The stage is set for an epic clash of interests at COP28

- GRAY MAGUIRE ● Maguire is carbon project manager at Climate Neutral Group SA. He writes in his personal capacity.

With COP28 now fast approachin­g the halfway mark, a stocktake of the first week’s outcomes is in order, along with a forecast of what lies ahead for the final week when the fanfare dies down.

As usual with the start of COP negotiatio­ns, things kicked off with a fair bit of fireworks when COP president Sultan al-Jaber announced a $30bn commitment to the United Arab Emirates’ newly launched catalytic climate finance vehicle, Altérra, which aims to mobilise $250bn in climate finance by 2030, with an emphasis on improving access to climate funding for the Global South.

This was followed by several days of pledges, totalling more than $650m, to the global loss and damage fund establishe­d at COP27, which aims to compensate developing countries for unavoidabl­e climate effects. In a similar vein, the second replenishm­ent round for the Green Climate Fund has been well supported, with pledges now surpassing the previous top-up round with a total of $12.8bn.

REHABILITA­TION

Closer to home, the African Developmen­t Bank announced the launch of the Climate Action Window under the African Adaptation Accelerato­r, to raise $14bn in adaptation support for 37 low-income countries through distribute­d renewable energy provision, climate-resilient agricultur­al technologi­es and insurance products for smallholde­r farmers, as well as the rehabilita­tion of 1-million hectares of degraded lands.

This was complement­ed by the announceme­nt from the COP presidency on Friday that 134 world leaders had signed up to its agricultur­e, food and climate action declaratio­n, which will provide $2.5bn in funding to support climate-resilient agricultur­e.

So far so fabulous. Lots of cash, important people and flashing cameras. But after the heads of state (including our own Uncle Cyril) have jetted off to tackle other pressing matters, the real nuts and bolts must be addressed. While all of these finance commitment­s are great and necessary, the core objective of COP28 is a global stocktake to ensure our collective emission reductions to maintain a habitable climate are effective.

TARGETS

Simply put, we are a long way from where we need to be when it comes to meeting these targets, and by early 2025 each country will have to come back with a plan to close the gap.

This COP must develop the set of agreed goals and approaches to guide individual country strategies, and with 90% of the agreement’s text still to be written, this will be no small ask.

Headlines from the event indicate that 118 countries — including the US, UK, India, China and members of the EU — are backing a pledge to triple clean energy production by 2030. But with the IMF stating that fossil fuel subsidies hit a record $7-trillion in 2022, these pledges must be taken with a dollop of salt.

Eliminatin­g just these subsidies would free up 7.1% of global GDP, in orders of magnitude larger than the fuzzy-math figures concocted in Bjorn Lomborg’s article in Business Day on December 1 (“COP28 performati­ve theatre set to produce more hot air”).

‘NO SCIENCE’

Indeed, vested interests are thick on the ground at the negotiatio­ns, not least with the COP president himself, who lost his composure in an interview with former UN special envoy for climate change Mary Robinson in the build-up to the negotiatio­ns. Jaber, the head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, said “there is no science out there, or no scenario out there, that says the phase-out of fossil fuel is what’s going to achieve 1.5°C”.

Given his company’s decision in 2022 to invest $150bn to increase oil production to 5-million barrels a day by 2027, I’m not surprised he’s less than ecstatic over proposals to cut emissions and boost renewable energy production.

With a week left to go, one thing is for sure. The stakes at this year’s COP are as high as they’ve ever been, and the stage is set for a clash of interests of epic proportion­s.

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