No consensus on rulebook to enforce Paris accord
CLIMATE CHANGE Call for rich countries to take the lead in implementing the agreement NEW DELHI:
Global negotiations under way in Katowice, Poland, to evolve a rulebook for enforcing the 2016 Paris agreement to curb climate change have made little headway a week into their fortnight’s duration amid persisting differences over key issues such as climate finance.
Delegates to COP24, as the 24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is known, are discussing a 307-page draft rulebook that will spell out how various provisions of the agreement kick into force.
The draft deals with issues such as periodic reporting of action being taken by the 195 signatories to the accord in meeting the so-called nationally determined contributions they had committed to, how much finance will flow in from developed to developing countries to mitigate the effects of climate change and in what form (bilateral or multilateral loans or grants).
Negotiators in the Polish city are talking about rich countries taking the lead in implementing the agreement and the less welloff taking action in accordance with their capacities.
Government officials and representatives of non-government organisations at COP24 said progress has been slow and major disagreements persist on key issues
“The process is still evolving. On every section of the agreement document, there are disagreements. Differentiation and climate finance are major sore points which will have to be resolved,” said Ravi Shankar Prasad, joint secretary in the Union environment ministry.
Environment secretary CK Mishra, who returned last week from the negotiations, said: “There is good momentum. We are not sure yet if the outcome will be optimum.”
Developed countries were to contribute an annual $100 million to developing nations to mitigate the effects of climate change under the Paris agreement.
Developed countries are not spending enough to mitigate the impact of climate change, the Indian ministry of finance submitted at COP24. In a paper titled “3 Essential “S”s of Climate Finance — Scope, Scale and Speed: A Reflection” , the ministry questioned climate finance values being reported by the developed countries as having been transferred by them to developing countries.
“Progress (COP24) is very slow and a lot of things need to be agreed upon. Ministers meeting from next week would require discussions on a wide array of issues...,” Vijeta Rattani of the climate change division at the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) said. The negotiations will continue for another week until December 14. Ministers of the negotiating countries will meet next week to iron the differences.
In the first week of the Katowice conference, scientists from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change briefed delegates about the consequences of not meeting their climate goals and the urgency for enhancing the goals to prevent global warming of 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
The UN 1.5-degree report warned that India will be one of the worst affected by heat stress resulting from climate change.
Crops, plantations, even livestock in 151 districts, or slightly more than one-fifth of the total districts in India, are susceptible to the impact of climate change, according to an annual review by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research.
“It is notable that the first week started off with the long shadow of IPCC which stressed the urgency of climate action. ..there are still many issues like transparency for reporting on finance by developed countries, allowing for differentiation in many sections which are crucial and have to be addressed in the next week when the high-level segment begins,” said Aarti Khosla of Climate Trends, a research and communications organization.
Climate scientists are hoping that negotiators take their warnings seriously.