Hindustan Times (East UP)

A manifesto for the climate summit

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The year 2020 teaches us that “super shocks” do not just come and go; they transform our ways of life. The climate crisis is another super shock, which will keep hitting harder going into the future. As we close out the pandemic year, the world’s largest polluters must pledge resources towards mitigating the climate super shock. That should be the metric to judge the Climate Ambition Summit on December 12.

The United Nations (UN) Secretary-General said, recently, “Our planet is broken”. He promised that the UN’s goal for 2021 would be to build a global coalition around reducing emissions to net zero, by cutting greenhouse gas emissions or removing them from the atmosphere. He envisions a carbon price, eliminated fossil fuel subsidies, carbon taxes on polluters, and support for those already facing adverse impacts.

The December 12 summit, on the fifth anniversar­y of the Paris Agreement on climate, is co-hosted by the United Kingdom (UK) presidency of the conference of the parties (COP-26, now scheduled for next year), the UN and France, in partnershi­p with Chile and Italy. World leaders are expected to make major announceme­nts on mitigation, adaptation and support.

The prospect of more speeches hardly sounds encouragin­g in the backdrop of a rapidly-unfolding climate crisis. Summits serve three purposes. High-level participat­ion allows leaders to negotiate knotty issues, building on personal rapport and the promise of grand bargains. Alternativ­ely, leaders could set a new agenda, drawing others to their cause. This was why India and France promoted the Internatio­nal Solar Alliance in 2015. Further, heads of state/government could make unilateral announceme­nts, baiting other countries to match in ambition. The 12/12 summit is primarily designed around the third objective.

To that end, four kinds of announceme­nts are expected: Upgraded Nationally Determined Contributi­ons (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement; long-term ambitions for net-zero emissions; commitment­s for more climate finance; plans and policies for adaptation.

India, the only G20 country with NDCs consistent with a 2 degree Celsius goal, could legitimate­ly ask, “Why should we upgrade NDCs when other major emitting countries should catch up with us?” Long-term ambitions are flaky. Thirty years ago, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change had not even been drafted. Since then, humanity has pumped out about 302.3 (±25.8) gigatonnes of carbon. With what crystal ball can the world hold countries accountabl­e for their 2050 or 2060 net-zero targets?

Moreover, the statements on December 12 will be made against the backdrop of the pandemic. Amid talk of building back better, government­s must deliver on jobs, growth and sustainabi­lity. Fiscal resources are limited. Returns on investment on restarting growth and creating new jobs would have to be quicker than waiting three decades for netzero emissions. As the capital of global finance, the UK has a chance to connect climate ambition with sustainabl­e recovery by triggering a real effort at sustainabl­e finance. Here are four ideas.

First, make clean energy access a centrepiec­e of climate action. Energy poverty remains one of the key barriers to sustainabl­e developmen­t. Access to distribute­d clean energy is also a route to energising small businesses in rural and urban settings. In India alone, there is a $50 billion market for using clean energy for productive enterprise­s in rural areas. In Sub-Saharan Africa, mobile money has helped to push the adoption of solar home systems. Now is the chance to bring together developing countries with a package that offers access to capital to finance such systems. With the potential to power labour-intensive businesses, this will signal that high-level summits have the interests of common people in mind.

Second, help small and medium industries become more energy-efficient. Again, lack of access to clean fuels or regular electricit­y supply means that often polluting (and more expensive) fuels are used. These make small industries uncompetit­ive, a double whammy for the economy and the environmen­t. Energyeffi­cient production processes need access to cheap working capital so that businesses can

 ?? Arunabha Ghosh ??
Arunabha Ghosh

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