Extract from The Guardian
France and UN want draft deal to be ready by
weekend, but differences remain over details as negotiations reach
half way point
Christiana Figueres, UN climate chief, addresses
delegates from 195 countries at the COP21 conference in Paris.
Photograph: Carl Court/Getty Images
Fiona
Harvey in Paris
Saturday 5 December 2015 02.03 AEDT
Delegates from 195 countries at climate
change talks in Paris are under pressure to produce a working
text of a deal by Friday, exposing sticking points and fault lines
nearly halfway through the UN negotiations.
Developed countries, along with the French hosts
and the UN, were mostly optimistic about signing a deal in advance of
the landmark summit.
World leaders met on the first day, an
unprecedented gathering of the heads of state and government of 150
countries, pledging their commitment to a legal outcome that
would reaffirm the world’s collective action on greenhouse gas
emissions.
Developed countries – or most of them – came
to the Paris climate change conference with a few clear priorities.
They wanted to validate the
emissions targets made by nearly all of the world’s governments;
prove to developing countries that the flows of finance, mostly from
the private sector, would be sufficient for the assistance they need;
and ensure that the mechanisms for review, transparency, and
accountability in meeting the emissions targets are sound.
On the emissions targets, the omens were good.
Nearly every country, developed and developing, produced a national
plan – known as Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDC)
– on curbing their emissions beyond 2020, when current
commitments, agreed at Copenhagen in 2009, run out.
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Although rich countries have been criticised for
not doing enough to keep global emissions below the levels likely to
lead to dangerous climate change, they were fortified by analyses
of the INDCs that the “emissions gap” could be met, with
additional contributions from “non-state actors” such as cities,
regional governments and businesses.
In addition, they
were proposing a mechanism of five-yearly reviews at which
commitments could be ratcheted up, which would enable the target
of limiting temperature rises to 2C to be met in future years.
However, while the principle of five-yearly
reviews was widely regarded as a useful and workable innovation, some
countries have raised concerns. These include China, India, Middle
Eastern countries and some of Latin America.
For these countries, a five-year “stock take”,
at which progress on targets could be discussed, is the preferred
option. They argue that, as most have 2030 targets, these should be
allowed to stand. But for countries such as the US, which has offered
a 2025 target, a five-year review would be appropriate.
Developed countries are resistant, still asking
for a full review process rather than a mere stock take. “It’s
about having a level playing field,” one delegate told the
Guardian. “That’s an important principle.”
Another said: “We don’t want to lock in modest
ambition [by dropping five-year reviews].”
This issue, along with the mechanisms for
reporting and verifying that emissions reductions have truly been
made, could yet provoke more controversy in the pressure-cooker
atmosphere of the talks.
On finance, reports
from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) and the World Resources Institute have suggested that
climate finance is flowing to the poor at levels needed to meet the
Copenhagen pledge of $100bn a year by 2020. Most of this is likely to
come from the private sector, but rich country governments and
international development banks, such as the World Bank, have
fortified the prospects with raised pledges on finance, such as the
UK’s promise of £5.8bn over this parliament.
Critics say some of this money is being taken from
other development aid budgets. The
finance issue is likely to continue to be wrangled over into the
closing days of the talks, as developing countries seek further
assurances.
Developed countries are holding firm on another
controversial matter: loss
and damage. This, according to the rich nations, is the principle
that poor countries struck by disasters of climate-related extreme
weather should receive special assistance, and they will commit to
that.
However, for some poor nations and NGOs, loss and
damage is interpreted as being compensation owed to the developing
world from the
industrialised countries that have historically been most responsible
for emissions.
“We are not signing up to anything on
compensation or liability,” one EU official said. The US is
understood to take the same stance.
Finally, a key risk as the talks grind on is that
yet again, as
at Copenhagen, they become bogged down in wrangles over details
in the text. The draft text contains thickets of square brackets,
denoting issues where wording has not yet been resolved, or where
several options still remain to be decided upon.
If these cannot be resolved in time, a text may
not be ready for agreement, and the talks could fail. The French
hosts, and the UN, have tried to avoid this by demanding
the text be ready at an early stage – this weekend – before
being passed to ministers for the political discussions that still
need to be had among countries.
To this end, they have introduced novel forums for
discussion among delegates, such
as a system of “informal informals” by which small groups of
officials take passages of the text – often just a paragraph –
and try to beat it into a shape acceptable to all.
“France is acutely aware of the risks of process
failure,” the EU official said. Getting a text into a workable
format is now the top priority.
Whether the compromises that are still possible
will be enough to satisfy developing countries cannot yet be
discerned. Some countries, including some Latin American, African and
Middle Eastern delegations, have been privately indicating they are
not happy with the way the talks have gone in their first week and
may step up their rhetoric in the second week.
India, which was late
to produce its INDC and whose president, Narendra Modi, has been
outspokenly critical of western countries, has been the subject of a
charm offensive, including meetings with President Obama, David
Cameron, and other high-ranking developed country officials, and from
NGOs.
At Durban, in 2011, the UN climate talks carried
on until dawn on the final Sunday, some 36 hours after they were
supposed to end, after a mammoth non-stop negotiating session. What
was at stake was in fact whether the Paris conference would take
place, and indeed the entire future of the UN process. Taking place
in the shadow of the 2009 Copenhagen summit, which produced a deal
but no legal agreement and ended
in scenes of chaos, the Durban conference was unusually fraught,
even by the standards of these long-running annual negotiations.
The EU had assembled a “coalition of ambition”
at Durban, made up of most of the poorest countries on the planet, as
well as the richest, to push for a new round of talks that would
culminate in 2015, aimed at forging a legal agreement to come into
force from 2020.
Late into Saturday night, only two countries were
holding out against that proposed timetable: China and India. In the
end, they
agreed to it. In the intervening years, China has re-gauged its
stance, most notably in forming
an unprecedented alliance last year with the US to announce joint
commitments on emissions. But the interests of Delhi and Beijing
are far from identical.
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