Oman Daily Observer

Climate summit gains receive Us-china boost

- Sudeep Sonawane Sudeep Sonawane, an Indiabased journalist, has worked in five countries in the Middle East and Asia. Email: [sudeep. sonawane@gmail.com

Discussion­s and negotiatio­ns at the climate change summit in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, list several good decisions and gains. Focusing on these would be good while contentiou­s issues will continue to simmer.

The gains of the 27th edition of Conference of Parties on climate change received further boost earlier this week. US President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping agreed to resume cooperatio­n on climate change at the G20 summit in Indonesia.

The summit reaffirmed its commitment to support civil societies through Action for Climate Empowermen­t [ACE], part of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

ACE supports civil societies to engage in climate change education and public awareness, training, public participat­ion, public access to informatio­n and internatio­nal cooperatio­n on these issues.

On November 11, the US and Egypt announced $150 million to aid Africa’s adaptation to climate change. Africa faces the challenge of access to funds, said Shoukry.

“This agenda comprises 30 adaptation targets by 2030. They will address the adaptation gap and increase the resilience of 4 billion people. This will come through speeding transforma­tion across five impact systems: food and agricultur­e, water and nature, coastal and oceans, human settlement­s and infrastruc­ture,” he said.

As part of the US Emergency Plan for Adaptation and Resilience (PREPARE), the US has doubled its Adaptation Fund Pledge to $100 million, and the Accelerati­ng Adaptation in Africa initiative provides $150 million in support to accelerate PREPARE’S work across the continent.

“Egypt as COP27 President and as an African nation knows the challenges of adaptation our continent faces. We have collaborat­ed over the past year with the United States to develop a diverse package of support for Africa for adaptation and resilience,” said Shoukry.

The Adaptation in Africa initiative, previously announced in June 2022 by President Biden and President Sisi, has the potential to result in $4-10 of benefits for every dollar invested.

On Decarbonis­ation Day, US Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry said, “How the world combines energy security, transition and affordabil­ity issues will have a profound outcome in the future.”

Commission­er for Infrastruc­ture, Energy and Digitalisa­tion African Union Dr Amani Abou Zeid said, “Climate change has hit Africa hardest. The damages costs $50 to 80 billion each besides loss of lives and conflicts.”

Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Tarek El Molla said, “The food not on our table, the crops wiped out is a global problem. This needs global solution.”

The summit’s second thematic day on science urged scientists to do more to make their data available and understand­able to help policymake­rs fight climate change.

COP President Shoukry said, “While we cannot turn back time on melting glaciers and reverse global emissions, we can stop backslidin­g on our commitment­s and slow down, even stop some of the impact of climate change by drawing upon science to find solutions.”

The summit made history by hosting the first ever youth-led climate forum. This session assembled highlevel policymake­rs with young representa­tives from the Conference of the Youth (COY17). The session focused on the role of climate education for youth, adolescent­s and children, and strengthen­ing climate action.

While observers recognise delegates engaging in discussion­s and negotiatio­ns on mitigating climate change at the summit, what are the tangible results?

This Tuesday global population reached eight billion. This does not worry some experts. They say excess consumptio­n and not population increase contribute­s to climate change. Producing, manufactur­ing, selling, buying and consumptio­n spurs growth and propels the economy.

Will the parties agree to large cuts and roll back? This is likely to remain a constant dilemma for them.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? An attendee poses for a photo during the COP27 climate summit in Sharm el Sheikh on Thursday.
— Reuters An attendee poses for a photo during the COP27 climate summit in Sharm el Sheikh on Thursday.

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