The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Climate talks head into overtime

- By Aritz Parra and Frank Jordans

Officials from almost 200 countries are scrambling to reach an agreement at a United Nations climate meeting amid growing concerns that key issues may be postponed for another year.

MADRID (AP) >> Officials from almost 200 countries hunkered down for another night of talks late Friday as a U.N. climate meeting in Madrid went into overtime without agreement on key issues.

Chile, which is chairing the talks, said negotiator­s would continue working on two fronts trying to get deals on aid for poor countries affected by climate change and internatio­nal carbon markets.

“Today is the day when we must show the world that we are capable of delivering the agreements that are needed to tackle the unpreceden­ted challenge before us,” Chilean official Andrés Landerretc­he told a roomful of exhausted reporters in the Spanish capital after two weeks of talks.

Landerretc­he said there was “some optimism” but added that the Paris agreement’s so- called Article 6, which sets the rules for trading in emissions vouchers, “requires more work in order to come to a cleaner text.”

“We’re going to remain in the premises as long as it takes,” said Landerretc­he. “And that could take well into the night or early hours of tomorrow.”

European Union countries and others have said they would prefer not to finalize rules on internatio­nal carbon markets rather than to approve ones that could undermine efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Economists say allowing companies and rich countries to invest in carboncutt­ing measures such as forest protection in poor countries could become a vital tool for lowering emissions, provided the markets are transparen­t and there is no double counting.

“We are all looking for a compromise,” Frans Timmermans, the European Commission’s top official in charge of climate issues, said earlier Friday. “But there is no way, no way, we could accept a compromise that jeopardize­s environmen­tal integrity. Just no way.”

Landerretc­he hinted that if the issue isn’t fully resolved, some parts could be deferred till next year.

“Maybe we arrive at a general agreement on Article 6, a principal agreement and leave the technicali­ties for some inter-sessional period, maybe,” he said. “But it’s not something that we are entertaini­ng at the moment”

Another topic still on the table concerns financial support for poor countries that suffer the effects of climate change, from stronger storms to droughts and sea level rise.

In 2013, countries agreed a tentative system to channel such aid, known as the Warsaw Internatio­nal Mechanism, or WIM. But some rich countries, particular­ly the United States, have resisted attempts to hold them formally accountabl­e for the impact their greenhouse gas emissions have on the climate, prompting criticism from developing nations.

“The U.S. government is the largest humanitari­an donor in the world,” a State Department official said Friday. “The WIM should be a constructi­ve space to catalyze action on the wide range of loss and damage issues.”

“A divisive conversati­on on blame and liability helps no one,” said the U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the ongoing negotiatio­ns.

President Donald Trump has formally triggered the United States’ withdrawal from the 2015 Paris climate accord, a process that will be completed Nov. 4, 2020 — a day after the next U.S. presidenti­al election.

The move means the United States, the world’s second biggest emitter of greenhouse gases after China, will be excluded from many of the negotiatio­ns at next November’s climate talks in Glasgow, Scotland.

As host next year, Britain will have to tackle any issues left over from Madrid and the more daunting task of getting countries to agree to tougher emissions targets, even as it continues to negotiate its exit fromthe European Union.

Dozens of countries have already said they will submit more ambitious emissions targets next year, though analysts say the commitment­s made so far aren’t enough.

Scientists have calculated that global emissions have to drop 7.6% annually, starting next year, if the Paris accord’s goal of keeping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the century is to be achieved.

Environmen­tal groups staged protests inside and outside the venue in Madrid to express their frustratio­n at the slow pace of the talks.

Vega Minsson, an activist with Fridays for Future Sweden, criticized the lack of progress.

“We’re not here for your entertainm­ent,” she said, adding: “If you want a future, you’d better act to the message we’re preaching and not just listen”

But observers said the protesters’ demands didn’t seem to be having an effect on the negotiatio­ns.

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 ?? PAULWHITE—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman looks at a World globe at the COP25clima­te talks congress in Madrid, Spain, Friday, Dec. 13, 2019. Officials from almost 200countri­es are scrambling to reach an agreement at a United Nations climate meeting amid growing concerns that key issues may be postponed for another year.
PAULWHITE—ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman looks at a World globe at the COP25clima­te talks congress in Madrid, Spain, Friday, Dec. 13, 2019. Officials from almost 200countri­es are scrambling to reach an agreement at a United Nations climate meeting amid growing concerns that key issues may be postponed for another year.

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