Stabroek News Sunday

Science, Technology and the Environmen­t Climate leaders cheer compensati­on deal at COP27

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Climate activists worldwide applauded an eleventhho­ur deal for a loss and damage fund to compensate nations hit by climate catastroph­es, the first of its kind in 30 years of climate negotiatio­ns.

The compensati­on fund will help in the rescue and reconstruc­tion of “particular­ly vulnerable countries” hit by climate-related events such as droughts and floods, but there was dispute over whether wealthier affected states should also benefit.

“With the creation of a new Loss and Damage Fund, COP27 has sent a warning shot to polluters that they can no longer go scot-free with their climate destructio­n,” said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy for Climate Action Network Internatio­nal, an organisati­on representi­ng 190 civil society groups in 130 countries.

“From now on, they will have to pay up for the damages they cause and are accountabl­e to the people who are facing supercharg­ed storms, devastatin­g floods and rising seas.”

Countries must now work together to ensure that the new fund can become fully operationa­l and respond to the most vulnerable people and communitie­s who are facing the brunt of the climate crisis, Singh told SciDev.Net.

Egypt’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and COP27 President Sameh Shoukry announced the long-awaited breakthrou­gh on Saturday afternoon as the two-week UN summit drew to a close in Egypt’s Sharm El-Sheikh.

“I now invite the COP to adopt the draft decision on funding arrangemen­ts for loss and damage. I hear no objections. It is so decided,” he said to applause from delegates.

The draft agreement will “establish new funding arrangemen­ts for assisting developing countries in responding to loss and damage” with a focus on “providing and assisting in mobilizing new and additional resources”.

However, responsibi­lity or compensati­on clauses are not included in the text and countries are not legally liable for payments. A group made up of officials from 24 nations will spend the next year determinin­g the specific structure of the fund, which nations should make contributi­ons, and where the money should be spent.

Saleemul Huq, director of the Internatio­nal Centre for Climate Change and Developmen­t, based in Bangladesh, said the deal was a major breakthrou­gh for the developing countries who have been demanding such a facility for many years.

“It is also a testament to all the developed countries who had previously been reluctant to agree to such a fund now having agreed,” he told SciDev.Net. It is certainly a historic achievemen­t for the UNFCCC [United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change] here in Sharm El-Sheikh in Egypt and in Africa.”

However, while this move was widely celebrated, parties at the Egypt convention were unable to come to an agreement to phase out fossil fuels as a result of a number of oil-producing countries blocking progress.

Nations came under criticism for failing to strengthen the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels, as set out in the 2015 Paris Agreement. Yeb Saño, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia and head of the Greenpeace delegation

attending COP27, welcomed the loss and damage agreement as “a new dawn for climate justice”.

But he added in a statement Sunday: “Developed countries must make good on the existing US$100 billion per year pledge to support low-income countries to deliver carbon-cutting policies and increase resilience to climate impacts. They must also implement their commitment to at least double funding for adaptation.”

Unanswered questions

It is still unclear exactly how the loss and damage fund will function. Many unanswered issues remain regarding the timeline for completion of the text and operationa­lization, as well as its precise funding arrangemen­ts. The text

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 ?? ?? Representa­tives of frontline communitie­s, indigenous groups and climate activists demonstrat­ing outside the COP27 conference halls in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. Wealthy nations agreed to form loss and damage fund. (Photo: Madeleine Race / Friends of the Earth Internatio­nal)
Representa­tives of frontline communitie­s, indigenous groups and climate activists demonstrat­ing outside the COP27 conference halls in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. Wealthy nations agreed to form loss and damage fund. (Photo: Madeleine Race / Friends of the Earth Internatio­nal)

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