China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US trumps developing world’s climate deal

Action, however, should be taken by countries of the South on their own terms, rather than under the pressure of developed countries.

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TheUnitedN­ations climate change conference inMarrakec­h, Morocco, concluded onNov 20 without making any substantia­l progress, because it was tasked with charting the course of implementi­ng the climate deal reached in Paris in December 2015.

Although the Paris agreement has been ratified by 105 countries at last count, including China and India, it is not fully in the spirit of the Kyoto Protocol and many see it as rewarding the big defaulters who also happen to be, historical­ly, the biggest polluters— the countries in the developed North.

There are two categories of such countries: those that agreed, under the Kyoto Protocol, the principle of historical culpabilit­y and the principle of “common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities” to reduce emissions more deeply than developing countries, but reneged; and those that refused to ratify the protocol, led by the historical­ly biggest emitter of greenhouse gases (GHGs), the United States.

The Kyoto Protocol was based on the principle that since the developed countries emitted huge amounts of GHGs for more than a century during their industrial­ization and developmen­t drives, they should yield “emission space” to the developing countries. Consequent­ly, it was further incumbent on them not only to undertake more stringent, and binding, emission cuts but also help developing countries to chart cleaner growth trajectori­es through financial aid and technology transfers.

None of this happened on a scale significan­t enough to make the kind of impact necessary to arrest climate change. TheUS refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol: its position was that of classical climate change denier, with formerUS president George H.W. Bush saying the American way of life was not up for negotiatio­n.

The Paris climate agreement buried the Kyoto Protocol and the principle of “common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities” and placed all countries, irrespecti­ve of their historical contributi­on to GHG emission or level of developmen­t, in the same position of having to undertake binding reduction targets, even if, obviously, the depth of cuts were not envisaged to be matching. Critically, the cuts accepted by the Barack Obama administra­tion, although Obama himself is a not climate change denier, were nowhere near the levels required to keep the temperatur­e from rising 2 C above pre-indus- trial levels, which climate scientists say is just short of the tipping point. The US is vital to any climate treaty because in the absence of adequate action by it, cuts accepted by most countries of the global South (including China and India) won’t cut the mustard.

Perhaps the leadership­s of the countries of the South should have done more to compel the developed world to fulfill its responsibi­lities. India is especially guilty of selling out.

For years, successive Indian government­s have been clear that the Kyoto Protocol framework should be the basis for the fight against climate change. It was clearly in assiduous pursuit of the “special relationsh­ip” with theUS that the Indian government craved so desperatel­y. While previous Indian government­s resisted the urge to give in to the demands of the developed world, especially theUS’, this one has, literally, stooped to genuflect before Washington’s interests.

This is not to say that India should not take urgent steps to reduce emissions. The recent crisis in Delhi caused by extremely hazardous air quality, which almost shut down the city, is enough of a warning.

Action, however, should be taken by countries of the South on their own terms, rather than under the pressure of developed countries. India has, in fact, been running an emissions-reduction program to meet voluntaril­y set targets, which will not hurt commitment­s to developmen­t and factor employment.

Nowthat Donald Trump, who is a self-proclaimed climate change denier, has been elected US president, the climate deal is back in the mix. If Trump sticks to his known anti-climate change stance, the only option would be to go back to the Kyoto Protocol and hope the WhiteHouse accepts its principles. The writer is a senior journalist based in India.

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