Daily Times (Primos, PA)

At COP28, UAE got what it wanted, others not so much

- By Jon Gambrell

As the United Nations COP28 climate summit ended Wednesday, Sultan al-Jaber walked out with what the United Arab Emirates wanted all along — the prestige of hosting negotiatio­ns that got the world to agree to transition away from fossil fuels while still being able to pump ever-more oil.

That left some wanting much more from the two weeks of talks, even as many praised its historic accord. But it no longer will matter to the state oil company chief executive and renewable energy advocate who embodies many of the traits that have propelled this young nation into the global spotlight.

Al-Jaber, who as president of COP28 facilitate­d the negotiatio­ns, faced criticism and scrutiny from the moment he took the position due to his oil ties. He tried to disarm critics among the delegates through an Emirati tradition, at one point convening a “majlis,” or a traditiona­l ruler’s sitting room to listen to concerns that he said he wanted not to have been laundered through layers of diplomacy and bureaucrac­y. Most still were.

But after an initial proposal drew screams, al-Jaber and his entourage presented another early Wednesday that gained the consensus required in the COP process.

And for all words written, said and broadcast about this global event, it really just boiled down to 34 in one clause-packed sentence: “Transition­ing away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner, accelerati­ng action in this critical decade, so as to achieve net zero by 2050 in keeping with the science.”

After the agreement’s adoption, al-Jaber received immediate support from some on hand.

“I have to say that the people that has criticizin­g Dr. Sultan and the UAE owe them an apology,” said Dan Jørgensen, Denmark’s climate minister. “They have been a transparen­t and inclusive presidency.”

Others offered a more critical take, noting that al-Jaber’s Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. still plans to boost its oil production up to 5 million barrels of crude a day. That means more of the carbonbelc­hing fuels driving climate change — which cause more-intense and more-frequent extreme events such as storms, droughts, floods and wildfires.

“The atmosphere responds to one thing: Emissions. It’s physics, stupid,” said Alden Meyer, a senior associate at the independen­t climate change think tank E3G. “And all the declaratio­ns, all the decisions, all the platitudes, all the announceme­nts in the world, if it doesn’t translate into real world action that reduces emissions, is not worth the paper it’s written on.”

Though hosted in Dubai, the final agreement reached at the summit ended up being called “the UAE Consensus,” an extremely unusual move as other deals have been named after their cities, like the landmark Paris Accords or the Kyoto Protocol. All this feeds into the wider ambitions of the UAE, an autocratic federation of seven sheikhdoms, to grow its political stature in the internatio­nal arena and to punch beyond its weight while further unifying this country that only formed in 1971.

Al-Jaber, long a trusted technocrat under leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, ultimately had only one boss to satisfy. But reaching the deal here also required negotiatin­g across fractious coalitions of countries that emerged at the talks.

 ?? KAMRAN JEBREILI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? COP28 President Sultan alJaber leaves a plenary session at the COP28 U.N. Climate Summit on Wednesday in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
KAMRAN JEBREILI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS COP28 President Sultan alJaber leaves a plenary session at the COP28 U.N. Climate Summit on Wednesday in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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