Hindustan Times (Noida)

COP27 STRIKES DEAL

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years that increasing disasters causing loss and damage (both economic and non-economic) affecting communitie­s/countries which are least responsibl­e for it are caused due to historic cumulative emissions. Efforts have begun by creating a funding arrangemen­t to address such a facility,” said Kunal Satyarthi, joint secretary, National Disaster Management Authority and India’s lead negotiator on loss and damage.

From India’s perspectiv­e, the victories included the climate conference’s (COP27) endorsemen­t of the sustainabl­e lifestyle mission, and a clause regarding energy transition­s, which did not single out particular fossil fuels.

“Our proposal on sustainabl­e lifestyles and consumptio­n has been taken on board and on cover decision. It was conceived in India’s Lifestyle For Environmen­t (LIFE) movement. We supported the loss and damage facility and suggested that the fund benefit all developing countries. We played a constructi­ve role and the outcome is good,” said Bhupender Yadav, Union environmen­t minister, at Sharm El Sheikh in Egypt, where COP27 was held.

An Indian delegate, who asked not to be named, added: “We have achieved good breakthrou­gh in just energy transition­s because it talks about diversifyi­ng energy mixes and doesn’t single out any fossil fuel. It is important for us.”

Earlier, at the plenary after the COP27 cover text was drawn up, Yadav said the “world has waited far too long for this”, referring to the L&D facility, while congratula­ting the COP27 presidency.

“For most developing countries, just transition cannot be equated with decarboniz­ation, but with low-carbon developmen­t. Developing countries need independen­ce in their choice of energy mix, and in achieving the SDGS (sustainabl­e developmen­t goals),” he said.

The decision on L&D states that keeping the global average temperatur­e rise to below 1.5°C will be essential to limiting future loss and damage, and expressed alarm that Working Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change has concluded that the gravity, scope and frequency of loss and damage will continue to increase with every additional fraction of a degree of temperatur­e increase.

The talks decided a transition­al committee will decide the modalities — such as how the payouts will be made under the fund and the sources — which will be considered at COP28 to be held in November or December, 2023.

The Transition­al Committee will have 23 members, comprising 10 from developed countries and 13 from developing countries.

One of the contention­s on the L&D issue was that developed countries were pushing to expand the donor base to include high income countries and emerging economies like China and India, and wanted to narrow the beneficiar­ies to only most vulnerable (island nations and least developed countries). EU also sought to link the formation of the L&D facility to mitigation efforts such as peaking global emissions before 2025; reaffirmin­g the call to reduce by 2030 non-carbon dioxide greenhouse gas emissions like methane; pushing all parties to urgently increase their efforts to closing the remaining mitigation gap to pathways consistent with 1.5 degrees; accelerati­ng the phase down of unabated coal power as soon as possible and submitting roadmaps towards this aim, HT reported on Friday.

But, following overnight negotiatio­ns and efforts to find compromise, the issue of source of funding has now been moved to the transition­al committee.

The Sharm El Sheikh Implementa­tion Plan recognizes the impact of climate change on the cryosphere and the need for further understand­ing of these impacts, including of tipping points. This is possibly the first time a cop cover decision, a legal document mentions climate tipping points approachin­g beyond which adaptation will not be possible, said experts.

Representa­tives of the European Union and the UK were disappoint­ed with the outcome. They had pushed for consensus on peaking global emissions before 2025; accelerati­ng the phase down of unabated coal power and submitting roadmaps to that effect; phasing out unabated fossil fuels and efforts to start the conversati­on on expanding the donor base to include high income and emerging economies — proposals that were thwarted.

“Friends are only friends. If they also tell you things you might not want to hear. This is the make-or-break decade. But what we have in front of us is not enough of a step forward for people and that it is not big enough efforts for major emitters to increase and accelerate their emissions cuts. It does not bring a higher degree of confidence that we will achieve the commitment­s made on the Paris Agreement and in Glasgow last year. It does not address the growing gap between climate science and climate policies,” said EU Climate Policy chief Frans Timmermans in an emotive speech at the closing plenary.

UK’S COP26 president Alok Sharma also said the Sharm El Sheikh decision is weak on many counts. “We have ultimately reiterated that, and it is critical that commitment is delivered by all of us. But we also want to take definitive steps forward. We joined with many parties and proposed a number of measures that would have contribute­d to emissions reductions like peaking before 2025 which science tells us is necessary, not in this text. Phase down coal, not in this text; phase out all fossil fuels not in the text,” he said.

Experts, however, saw UK’S and EU’S stance as being duplicitou­s. “The scolding on mitigation progress by the EU smacks of duplicity. Without steep declines in developed country emissions and substantia­l new climate finance, keeping to 1.5°C will require squeezing energy demand in poor countries. Lack of progress on providing finance adds insult to injury,” said Navroz Dubash, professor, Centre for Policy Research. Dubash added that “the creation of a loss and damage fund signals that it is now impossible for countries to claim an ethical climate stance without supporting this agenda”.

“Post Sharm we face a serious reckoning on 1.5°C. Not enough cuts in the North, not enough money to accelerate and understand­able unwillingn­ess to compromise developmen­t in the South. Something has to give and it may be 1.5,” he added.

But some vulnerable countries saw the progress as encouragin­g, if not ideal. “We have literally exhausted all of our efforts here at COP27 to bring home the climate action commitment­s our vulnerable people desperatel­y need. But after the pain comes the progress. Today, the internatio­nal community has restored global faith in this critical process,” said Molwyn Joseph, chair of Alliance of the Small Island States.

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