China Daily

Climate delegates haggle over issues in final hours

- By HOU LIQIANG in Katowice, Poland houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Delegates to the United Nations climate talks in Poland continued to haggle over some pending issues on Friday, just hours before the conference was set to end, although a draft text had been proposed.

The first comprehens­ive draft agreement was published at 3 am on Friday local time and was then updated at around 11 am. But by press time in China, difference­s still remained on how to implement guidelines laid out in the 2015 Paris agreement.

Transparen­cy in fulfilling nationally determined contributi­ons, or NDCs — the pledges each country made for post-2020 emission reductions to meet the universal goal of holding global temperatur­e increases to less than 2 C above preindustr­ial levels — and financial support from developed countries to developing ones are among those to be further discussed under the latest draft.

“I think generally, the text is balanced. It takes into considerat­ion the interests and positions of various parties,” said Gou Haibo, special representa­tive for climate change negotiatio­ns from China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. “But it still needs to be improved. We hoped that during the day these disputes will be settled by consultati­ons between the COP 24 president and the groups.”

There were many difference­s, but no extremely big ones, he said. All parties agreed with the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities stipulated in the Paris agreement, but some minor difference­s exist on the understand­ing over how to embody the principle, Gou said.

The developing countries wanted the principle to be reflected more fully in the text.

“I believe these difference­s can be bridged through further negotiatio­ns today or tomorrow,” he said. The climate conference was scheduled to close on Friday but could be extended.

Gou said he was optimistic about a positive result.

“Nobody is going to be 100 percent satisfied, but we hope it will be accepted by everybody,” he said.

During the talks, developed countries had also requested developing countries to increase transparen­cy in fulfilling their reduction pledges.

Xie Zhenhua, China’s special representa­tive on climate change affairs, said on Thursday that with their emission reduction and support commitment­s yet to be fulfilled, developed countries are not in a position to make such a new requiremen­t.

It is clearly stated both in the Kyoto Protocol and Paris agreement that developed countries should dramatical­ly reduce their carbon emissions before 2020 and also offer financial and technologi­cal support to developing countries to help them deal with the effects of global warming.

Even as they fail to meet the targets suggested by the UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, many developed countries have also yet to fulfill their financial commitment­s, Xie said.

At the 2009 UN climate change conference, developed countries pledged $30 billion — called “fast start” funds — from 2010 to 2012, and a scale-up of the aid to $100 billion per year by 2020.

“Some of the developed countries have reached their reduction targets as suggested, and also contribute financial support. Many have neither fulfilled their targets nor offered the money or given out enough,” Xie said.

Many have neither fulfilled their targets nor offered the money or given out enough.”

Xie Zhenhua, China’s special representa­tive on climate change affairs

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong