Sunday Times

Opec boss bats for dirty fuels

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● Opec secretary-general Haitham Al Ghais has urged cartel members to reject proposals for any deal under negotiatio­n at the COP28 climate summit that targets fossil fuels rather than emissions, according to a letter dated December 6 and seen by Reuters on Friday shows.

The language used to describe the future of fossil fuels in a final agreement is the most contentiou­s issue at the summit, hosted this year by the UAE, which is a member of Opec.

Three sources confirmed the letter’s authentici­ty.

Opec said in a statement it did not comment on official communicat­ions with member countries, but that it continues to advise them and its partners.

The letter referred to a draft of the COP28 text under negotiatio­n that was published by the UN climate body on December 5. A different draft was published on Friday.

The new draft deal includes various options, from agreeing to a “phase-out of fossil fuels in line with best available science”, to phasing out “unabated fossil fuels”, to including no language on them at all.

“It seems that the undue and disproport­ionate pressure against fossil fuels may reach a tipping point with irreversib­le consequenc­es, as the draft decision still contains options on fossil fuels phase-out,” the letter states.

“I avail of this opportunit­y to respectful­ly urge all esteemed Opec member countries and non-Opec countries participat­ing in the CoC [Charter of Co-operation] and their distinguis­hed delegation­s in the COP28 negotiatio­ns to proactivel­y reject any text or formula that targets energy; that is, fossil fuels, rather than emissions.”

Opec members already hold positions largely opposing strong language on phasing out fossil fuels.

The UAE, the second Arab country to host the climate summit after Egypt in 2022, has together with other Gulf energy producers called for what they consider a more realistic energy transition in which fossil fuels would keep a role in securing energy supplies while industries decarbonis­e.

Countries are expected to focus on the language around fossil fuels over the next few days in hopes of reaching a consensus before the summit’s scheduled end on December 12.

“The inclusion of some options that focus on the need for action towards phasing out all fossil fuels this critical decade is a step in the right direction,” said Nikki Reisch, climate and energy programme director at the Centre for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law.

“But language calling for the massive scale-up of risky and speculativ­e carbon capture and removal technologi­es risks blowing a gaping loophole through the energy package and must be struck,” she said.

Opec said in a reply to questions about its December 6 letter that it would continue to advocate reducing emissions, not choosing energy sources.

“The world requires major investment­s in all energies, including hydrocarbo­ns, all technologi­es, and an understand­ing of the energy needs of all peoples,” the Opec statement reads.

Li Shuo, director of the China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, said of the new draft COP28 agreement: “This is the beginning of the end.”

He said the first version included options from “two extreme sides of the political spectrum” and the new options were filling in “the empty field in the middle”.

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