Sunday Star-Times

Climate talks chart a complex course away from fossil fuels

- Ishaan Tharoor – Washington Post

“It’s not enough to talk about the principle of phasing out fossil fuels. We also need to know at what pace. The final text of COP28 does not set a precise timetable.”

Le Monde

At the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Dubai, dubbed COP28, which drew to a close this week, tens of thousands of delegates, experts, lobbyists and activists descended on a lavish campus erected in the Emirati metropolis to stave off a looming planetary catastroph­e.

From the outset, the summit was a jumble of contradict­ions, a forum hosted by an oil-pumping petrostate. Proceeding­s were always going to be complicate­d, but the result of days of wrangling over a final communiqué yielded what most analysts have cast as a qualified success.

The summit’s hosts, led by state oil executive Sultan Al Jaber, exulted in staging of a first-class event that ultimately obscured criticism of the UAE’s pivotal role in the fossil fuel ecosystem. Al Jaber, whose appointmen­t at the head of the summit itself elicited a huge backlash from climate campaigner­s, hailed the “new mindset” of inclusivit­y that shaped the deliberati­ons.

The agreement taking government­s forward calls for “transition­ing away from fossil fuels”, a declaratio­n mostly absent in close to three decades of UN climate talks. It emerged from a complex set of geopolitic­s.

“Major Gulf oil exporters aligned with big fossil fuel consumers, such as China and India, in pushing back against fossil fuel goals that Europeans and island nations described as essential,” Washington Post global climate correspond­ent Chico Harlan says.

“In a sign of the twisted interests, some of the countries calling to phase down oil and gas – the United States, Canada, Norway and Australia – are simultaneo­usly planning expansion projects.”

But the agreement in its current form does not address the long-standing goal enshrined in the 2015 Paris agreement to prevent global warming from surpassing more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels – a threshold beyond which scientists and researcher­s warn of epochal climactic disasters.

The understand­ings forged in Dubai do “little to ensure that the world will hit the brakes fast enough to avoid the ever-worsening consequenc­es of warming”, the Post’s environmen­tal reporter Brady Dennis wrote.

Analysts are still parsing the voluminous

document that emerged from COP28. The key takeaway, for now, is the decision by its drafters after negotiatio­ns to do away with the more aggressive concept of “phasing out” fossil fuels, and instead favour language surroundin­g a “transition”.

This is not simply semantic gymnastics – it points to the reality of myriad countries scaling up their fossil fuel activities even while working towards decarbonis­ing their economies.

“Rather than shutting down oil wells, as ‘phasing out’ would suggest, by using the wording ‘transition­ing away’, the UN is effectivel­y calling on countries to first reduce demand,” wrote Bloomberg’s Javier Blas. “It may sound like splitting hairs, but it’s an important distinctio­n.

“That’s why Saudi officials emerged from the COP28 summit smiling. In future gatherings, they can argue that they will keep pumping oil until there are signs that transition is under way.”

Officials who aren’t smiling include the representa­tives of small island nations on the front lines of climate change, whose existentia­l peril sits awkwardly against the ballooning spectacle of the annual summits, attended by hordes of lobbyists and canape-munching executives.

“[We] did not come here to sign our death warrant,” John Silk, minister of natural resources and commerce for the Marshall Islands, said in the early days of the summit. It’s fair to suggest that the outcome of COP28 does not match his sense of urgency.

“It’s not enough to talk about the principle of phasing out fossil fuels. We also need to know at what pace,” noted an editorial in French daily Le Monde.

“The final text of COP28 does not set a precise timetable, other than to achieve net zero emissions by 2050. Consensus could only be reached by leaving the door open to a series of loopholes likely to slow the momentum.”

That was to be expected. “No gathering of so many countries and different interests can reach total agreement on all issues,” argued an editorial in the National, a UAE-based English-lanugage daily, pointing to progress.

“Getting major energy producers and consumers to discuss common interests with developing nations and climate campaigner­s is a significan­t step forward from the days when many countries still doubted the science on climate change.”

Sceptics on the right still scoff at the clash between the West’s decarbonis­ing agenda and the actions of countries like China and India, which remain big fossil fuel consumers.

“The deal they agreed to has all the force and idealism of the 1928 Kellogg-Briand Pact that outlawed war,” declared a Wall Street Journal editorial, bemoaning the “arrogance of global elites” in Europe and the United States who are forcing their publics to swallow the costs of the energy transition while nations elsewhere keep powering their rising economies on coal.

In India, commentato­rs pushed back. “A large part of the blame for the global failure to curb fossil fuel use gets laid at the doors of India and China. This is unfair and simplistic,” noted an editorial in the Indian Express.

“A distinctio­n must be made between the imperative of lifting large sections of the Global South out of poverty and the interests of oil cartels.”

Climate activists are broadly unimpresse­d.

At a Washington, DC panel event hosted by the Atlantic on Friday, Aru Shiney-Ajay, executive director of the Sunrise Movement, a left-leaning US climate advocacy group, said “the number of fossil fuel lobbyists at COP 28” was “ridiculous”, and that social movements focused on climate activism ought to work harder in the coming years to “stigmatise” these executives.

Jade Begay, who sits on the White House’s Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Council, said at the same panel that what COP28 achieved was “not enough”. But, she added, “never in the history of these 28 climate negotiatio­ns has there been a mention of fossil fuels, so we’ve done something”.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A security guard removes Indian environmen­tal activist Licypriya Kangujam after she interrupte­d a panel discussion at the COP28 Climate Conference in Dubai. The summit’s final agreement calls for “transition­ing away from fossil fuels”, a declaratio­n mostly absent in almost three decades of United Nations climate talks.
GETTY IMAGES A security guard removes Indian environmen­tal activist Licypriya Kangujam after she interrupte­d a panel discussion at the COP28 Climate Conference in Dubai. The summit’s final agreement calls for “transition­ing away from fossil fuels”, a declaratio­n mostly absent in almost three decades of United Nations climate talks.

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