Miami Herald

COP27 summit in Egypt begins with deal to discuss climate reparation­s

- BY JOHN AINGER, SALMA EL WARDANY AND JENNIFER A. DLOUHY

U.N. climate talks began in Egypt Sunday with a deal to discuss how rich countries can help pay for the damages caused by global warming elsewhere.

The breakthrou­gh, reported in advance by Bloomberg, will allow diplomats to officially debate so-called “loss and damage” for the first time during the two week conference in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh resort.

Developing countries have been demanding a discussion on climate reparation­s since Conference of Parties, or COP, meetings started in the early 1990s.

But industrial­ized nations that have prospered for two centuries at the expense of the planet repeatedly blocked efforts to add it to the agenda, fearing it would open up demands for billions of dollars in compensati­on from poorer countries.

Recent climate disasters, such as the floods in Pakistan, had put the issue back into focus.

Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said the breakthrou­gh was reached after 48 hours of intense talks concluded with a compromise; the discussion would focus on “cooperatio­n and facilitati­on” not “liability or compensati­on.”

“Inclusion of this agenda reflects a sense of solidarity and empathy with the suffering of the victims,” Shoukry said after taking up his position as COP27 president Sunday.

The delegates would aim to reach a conclusive decision on loss and damage “no later than 2024,” he said.

A report issued Sunday by the U.N. World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said global temperatur­es are likely to end the year about 1.15C above the pre-industrial average — an accelerati­on that’s unleashed “climate chaos” across the planet.

The world is currently on track to miss its target to limit global warming to 1.5C by the century’s end.

With the gathering hosted by an African country that’s warming faster than the rest of the world, climate reparation­s are expected to be a key focus.

Developing countries and small island states contribute­d a tiny amount to historical emissions of planet-warming gases but have been battered by the impact. They had stepped up in recent weeks demands for the issue to at least be discussed.

The smooth adoption of the agenda followed behind-the-scenes negotiatio­ns to avoid a skirmish at the start of the conference, when the order of proceeding­s is agreed.

The opening session was delayed for more than an hour to accommodat­e final discussion­s on wording.

While Sunday’s agreement counts as a diplomatic success, countries will now have to work out how best to measure loss and damage and how much money will be put on the table by the wealthiest to help the rest.

Developing nations have been burned before. A plan announced in 2009 to provide an annual $100 billion of mitigation and adaptation finance has never been met.

The Alliance of Small Island States welcomed Sunday’s developmen­t but said the issue should have been addressed long ago. Instead, rich countries continued to burn fossil fuels that are threatenin­g the survival of some islands.

“We do not want to be treated as though you are doing us a favor by adding an agenda item or creating a voluntary fund,” it said in a statement. This “reflects the floor of what is acceptable; it is our bare minimum.”

Egypt already suffers suffocatin­g heat. The flow of the Nile is dwindling and rising sea levels are damaging some of its most fertile farmland.

As COP27 opened on Sunday, one official after another called for participan­ts to move from talks to implementa­tion, warning that the window for meaningful action was closing.

“A reasonable sum is more than zero,” Saleemul Huq, a professor at the Independen­t University in Bangladesh, said. “Right now, they’re offering zero, which is absolutely unacceptab­le.”

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