Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Should emerging economies pay for climate change?

- Jayashree Nandi

NEW DELHI: Who will pay for loss and damage caused by the climate crisis ? And who will pay for what countries should do to adapt to climate change?

A new controvers­y is brewing at the UN Climate Conference (COP27) following Gaston Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda’s comment on Tuesday that highly polluting emerging economies such as China and India should also contribute to a Loss and Damage compensati­on fund.

The thinking thus far has been only on having historical polluters (read: the developed world) pay for this.

There is also a subtle push from developed countries to include China and India in the donor base for a new, collective quantified goal (NCQG) for the post 2025 period which will begin from the floor of $100 billion per year that developed countries were supposed to pay from 2020 onwards, and there is also a push to increase the donor base for the Adaptation Fund, observers said.

Browne was speaking on behalf of the Associatio­n of Small Island States (AOSIS)on Tuesday when he said: “We all know that the People’s Republic of China, India — they’re major polluters, and the polluter must pay. I don’t think that there’s any free pass for any country and I don’t say this with any acrimony,” Reuters reported on November 9.

Indian officials who are part of the delegation said on Wednesday that the country is already funding and implementi­ng projects for south-south cooperatio­n and resilience building. “We (Indians) are also victims of emissions from developed countries and we are also paying for our adaptation and loss and damage and helping others,” one of the officials added on condition of anonymity. Other Indian officials pointed to India’s role in creating coalitions such as the Coalition of Disaster Resilient Infrastruc­ture (CDRI), and campaigns such as Infrastruc­ture for the Resilient Island States (IRIS). One official said India‘s per capita emissions are a third of the global average.

During informal consultati­ons of matters related to the adaptation fund convened on November 9, parties discussed a draft text proposed by the co-facilitato­rs.

According to observers of the Third World Network, an advocacy organisati­on working on northsouth affairs, on the issue of doubling the collective provision of climate finance for adaptation, the US has requested deletion of “in the context of doubling the collective provision of climate finance from developed to developing countries.”

It also proposed deleting a reference to “invites developed country Parties” since “all the countries” should be invited “to contribute to the AF,” TWN’s bulletin on Thursday

said.

The Glasgow Climate Pact urged developed countries to at least double their collective provision of climate finance for adaptation to developing country Parties from 2019 levels. The Africa Group, and Saudi Arabia for the Arab group and China, said they did not support the notion of diversifyi­ng the fund’s contributo­r base according to TWN’s bulletin.

TWN also pointed that report of the Adaptation Fund Board revealed there are outstandin­g pledges worth $174.6 million.

Indian officials confirmed that developed countries want to expand the donor base for the new climate finance and that India has always resisted this. “The Paris Agreement has a provision of including those in the donor base who are willing and able to do so,” the first official said.

Independen­t experts said AOSIS’ comments urging that India and China to also pay up for Loss and Damage, goes against the principle of south-south solidarity because it is G77 (a group of developing nations, now numbering 134) and China which had first proposed that Loss and Damage funding be included in the formal agenda of COP27.

“The onus of providing loss and damage finance lies with the rich industrial­ised countries whose historical emissions are responsibl­e for the climate crisis the world is facing right now. Their lack of action for decades is causing supercharg­ed storms, devastatin­g floods and unpreceden­ted heatwaves. It is immoral for rich countries, such as the US, who have not paid their fair share of climate finance, to shift the burden onto developing countries,” said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network Internatio­nal.

THERE IS ALSO A SUBTLE PUSH FROM DEVELOPED COUNTRIES TO INCLUDE CHINA AND INDIA IN THE DONOR BASE FOR A NEW, COLLECTIVE QUANTIFIED GOAL

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