Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

In climate plan, equity is crucial

Rich nations are trying to wriggle out of their responsibi­lity to the planet. This is wrong

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The 27th Conference of the Parties is entering its last lap, and negotiatio­ns are, unironical­ly, heating up. This newspaper reported that new redlines have emerged around the key principles of equity and common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities (CBDR). The historical polluters are trying to corner developing economies (especially India and China) on two aspects — contributi­on to the Loss and Damage fund and responsibi­lity for mitigation work programmes (steps that reduce emissions) — by pushing for the use of words such as “emerging economies”, “major polluters”, and “parties with capacity” in the cover text. The changes threaten to scuttle efforts for a balanced cover text reflecting common concerns — which, by virtue of being a compromise, would still have benefited countries that have historical­ly benefited from carbon-rich economies — and end up diluting the principles set by the Paris Agreement.

The stage is set for a hectic round of negotiatio­ns. Some of these contestati­ons were reflected in an unofficial draft circulated on Thursday that accommodat­ed the concerns of poorer countries to a far greater degree. This new draft captured the distinctio­n between developed and developing countries and highlighte­d the principles of equity and CBDR. The paper struck a balancing act by calling for the phasing down of coal and inefficien­t fossil fuel subsidies but adding that the efforts will be based on national circumstan­ces and just transition. It also reflected growing global frustratio­n with richer countries over their weak commitment to providing climate finance and technology.

Efforts by the global North to remove the distinctio­n between developed and developing parties in their obligation­s on delivering climate finance and mitigating emissions are unconscion­able. For a just climate plan, there cannot be any dilution of the principles of equity and CBDR, and developed countries have to pay for the clean-up as they are solely responsibl­e for the climate crisis, a fact backed by scientific data. This game of climate brinkmansh­ip is undesirabl­e, especially when several studies indicate that the world is falling dangerousl­y behind its climate commitment­s. On behalf of the developing world, which is bearing the brunt of the climate crisis, India must stand its ground and resist any clever wordplay that aims to bracket it with the developed world. In addition, New Delhi must continue forcing the developed world to deliver on its long-standing promises of climate finance and green technology at affordable rates. Nothing less will do.

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