China Daily

Act together to fight climate change

- Bilawal Bhutto Zardari The author is foreign minister of Pakistan. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

As the chair of the COP 27 Group of 77 and China (i.e. developing countries), it was my responsibi­lity to bring together the countries of the world to finally make realistic and significan­t steps to address the current and future implicatio­ns of climate change and global warming on the planet, with particular reference to the developing world. For me this was not just a profession­al responsibi­lity but a deeply personal one as foreign minister of Pakistan, the country that was ravaged by the climate change catastroph­e of severe floods in 2022. The decision at Sharm el-Sheikh to establish a fund to assist developing countries address loss and damage from the adverse impacts of climate change was a momentous first step, a signal of hope for humanity and the planet.

As the chair, I proposed the discussion on a loss and damage financing facility last June in the preparatio­ns for COP 27. We faced familiar resistance to placing the issue on the Conference agenda. Ultimately, and not easily, we succeeded.

The impacts of climate change and global warming have progressiv­ely become more frequent and ferocious. Those who have contribute­d the least to global warming are suffering the most. For 30 years, the most vulnerable countries have pressed for a fund through which those who have contribute­d the most to global carbon emissions would help the vulnerable countries recover from climate disasters and other consequenc­es of climate change — rising sea levels, drought, hurricanes and floods.

The epic floods in Pakistan this year, vividly and brutally confirmed the growing magnitude of climate disasters — with tens of thousands killed or injured; millions displaced; 13,000 km of roads, 2 million homes, 500 bridges and 5 million acres of crops destroyed, and one-third of the country literally under water. My home province of Sindh was the most devastated. It was only after seeing first-hand the scale of loss of catastroph­ic proportion­s, the indescriba­ble suffering of innocent people, incalculab­le damage, and realizing there was no internatio­nal financial mechanism to address disasters of this scale, that I fully understood the magnitude of the loss, understood the full extent of the damage done, and the absolute necessity to take bold steps to save people and the natural environmen­t.

This monumental disaster — and simultaneo­us floods in Nigeria, drought in the Horn of Africa, and hurricanes in the Pacific and the Caribbean — reinforced the determinat­ion of developing countries to secure climate justice. Pakistan’s tenacious efforts, actively supported by the most vulnerable and other developing countries, yielded the agreement at the opening of COP 27 to place this item on the agenda. As the chair, I realized the importance of Pakistan leading the developing countries in the subsequent negotiatio­ns at the Conference to press for the establishm­ent of the fund. We commend the Group’s solidarity in pursuing the creation of the loss and damage funding arrangemen­ts and of the fund itself. We appreciate the ultimate acceptance of the proposal by the developed countries, including the European Union and the US.

The developing countries look forward to urgent work in the Transition­al Committee of 24 members to finalize the fund’s institutio­nal arrangemen­ts, structure, governance, and terms of reference, as well as to define the elements of the new funding arrangemen­ts, to identify and expand the sources of funding and establishi­ng means to ensure coordinati­on and complement­arity with existing arrangemen­ts. Among the most important tasks for the Transition Committee is to identify the scale of funding required to meet the current consequenc­es of climate change. This may sound technical to the lay reader but it literally means life and death for our children and grandchild­ren and generation­s yet unborn.

While the agreement does not establish the legal responsibi­lity of those who have contribute­d the most to climate change and global warming, it does confirm the central principle of climate justice — that those who are suffering the most from the impacts of climate change, — although they have contribute­d the least to global warming, — deserve financial support from those who have contribute­d the most to climate change, and who have done the most damage to the environmen­t.

A first test of climate justice will be the response to Pakistan’s plan for rehabilita­tion and reconstruc­tion from the floods disaster and efforts to build resilience against future disasters. This plan will be submitted to a Pledging Conference to be convened jointly by Pakistan and the UN secretary-general in January 2023. The World Bank has estimated that Pakistan suffered damage amounting to over $30 billion and will require at least $16.5 billion in urgent external support.

The loss and damage fund has yet to be operationa­lized. Pakistan expects that financing for its rehabilita­tion and reconstruc­tion plan will come from the industrial countries and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns, including the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and multilater­al developmen­t banks. Such support could include debt write-offs, swaps and restructur­ing; new Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Reserves (SDR) allocation­s or rechanneli­ng of the unused SDRs of the developed countries; direct support for reconstruc­tion projects, as well as private investment for projects that can be structured, e.g. with blended finance, to be commercial­ly viable. We also expect expression­s of solidarity from Pakistan’s friends in the Islamic world and the Global South.

Although climate impacts have become inevitable due to the 1.1-degree Celsius global warming that has occurred already over the past 150 years, it remains vital to limit the impacts of climate change as far as possible going forward. More should have been

done before. But it is our responsibi­lity not to whine, but to act.

It is therefore concerning that the adaptation plans of so many developing countries are still not funded. The Glasgow decision to “at least double” climate finance for adaptation must be urgently fulfilled. At COP 27, Pakistan proposed immediate implementa­tion of this decision. We expect that at COP 28 in the United Arab Emirates next year we will be able to establish a mechanism to measure and monitor financial flows for climate adaptation.

Most importantl­y, the commitment made since 2009 to mobilize $100 billion annually in climate finance has not been fulfilled. The developed countries need to urgently meet this commitment and agree to a New Collective Quantified Goal for larger climate finance from the floor of $100 billion by the next conference of parties in November 2023.

Of course, the ultimate and common goal is to halt global warming and avoid the “tipping points” that climate scientists predict would lead to a global climate catastroph­e. However, the onus to ensure that global temperatur­e rise is limited to 1.5 degrees Celsius is mainly on the industrial countries which have consumed twothirds of the “carbon budget” over the past 150 years. The remaining one-third of this “budget” is what developing countries will need to grow out of poverty and achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. Therefore, the mitigation commitment­s of the Global North must be enhanced and accelerate­d. Unfortunat­ely, it was evident at COP 27 that the industrial countries had not implemente­d the mitigation commitment­s assumed in Glasgow and were reluctant to agree to a larger and faster pathway to reduce emissions and keep the 1.5-degree Celsius target “alive”.

Climate action is but one component of the cooperativ­e efforts required to achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals — to end hunger and poverty; promote health and education, restore global growth, and ensure lives of dignity and well-being for all nations and peoples.

As it concludes its tenure as chair of the Group of 77 and China at the end of this year, Pakistan will make a final push to advance the SDGs and climate goals at a Ministeria­l Conference of the developing countries in New York in mid-December. The outcomes of this meeting will, we hope, set the agenda that the Global South can promote at the SDG Summit and COP 28 next year.

It may be too late for the victims of Pakistan floods, but it is my fervent hope that the loss and damage facility will be in place to assist other countries devastated. For what happened to Pakistan will not be exclusive to Pakistan. In 2022 it was Pakistan, next year it could be anyone. Or everyone. The future of the world depends on our common efforts that need to move forward now.

 ?? JIN DING / CHINA DAILY ??
JIN DING / CHINA DAILY

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