COP25 ended in disappointment. What does this mean for countries already suffering the consequences of climate change?
segunda-feira, janeiro 06, 2020
A report from the World
Meteorological Organization released just prior to COP25 offered a stark
summary: 2019 was one of the hottest years in recorded human history and the
year with the highest mean sea level on record. Other data suggest that nearly a third of all residents of remote island nations live no more than a few meters above sea
level, meaning their survival is inextricably tied to the global community’s
efforts to reduce emissions and prepare for climate change.
It is in this context that nations convened in Madrid last month for
COP25. And it is in this context that parties punted discussions to the next
COP meeting in 2020 about a global emissions trading system and a formal
mechanism for funding climate change adaptation efforts in developing nations.
According to Nathaniel Keohane from the Environmental Defense Fund on a recent episode of Resources
Radio, this year’s conference “was basically a
failure.” Robert Stavins, a university fellow at Resources for the Future (RFF)
and a Harvard professor, is more optimistic, but he still argues that a lack of
guidance on carbon pricing represents a “significant unfulfilled objective.”
One factor in the standstill is that smaller, developing
countries—low-lying island nations, most prominently—are increasingly
requesting financial assistance to deal with climate change. In debates over
carbon pricing, these nations insisted on a “share-of-proceeds”
tax on traded emissions offsets, which could finance an Adaptation Fund to
help countries with modest financial resources meet the challenge of climate
change. Such a mechanism would have the potential to hinder trade, according to
both Keohane and Stavins, which would run counter to the ostensible purpose of
an emissions trading system. But a mechanism like this also would provide
recourse to the many countries that are already reckoning with the consequences
of climate change.
Debate about a “loss-and-damage” mechanism unfolded similarly. “Loss and
damage” effectively boils down to one question, according to Keohane: “Could we
envision a UN mechanism to compensate countries that are suffering the impact
of climate change … that would be paid for by the rich countries?” More
specifically, a formal review of the Warsaw International Mechanism (WIM) for Loss and Damage, a framework to provide capital to countries vulnerable to the effects
of climate change, was scheduled for this year’s COP. First created at COP19,
the WIM was subsequently incorporated into the Paris Agreement, but only on the condition that
it would “not provide any basis for establishing liability and compensation.”
Much of the developing world has argued that this arrangement leaves the WIM effectively toothless.
A lack of agreement at COP25 over the purpose and structure of WIM was
predictable to Keohane, but the tenor of the debate was notably “quite
acrimonious.” A delegate from Tuvalu, a sparsely populated island nation
especially vulnerable to changes in sea level, called the standstill “an absolute tragedy and travesty.” In response to resistance primarily from the United States and other
big polluters, a Palestinian diplomat who organized a bloc of developing
countries told Politico: “At the end of the day, [rich countries] started the fire … and the
fire is eating everything around us.”
Disputes between the developed and the developing world over moral
responsibility for climate change are nothing new. Stavins has written about
how “developing countries had no emissions reduction commitments” under the
Kyoto Protocol, an arrangement which especially riled developed nations like
the United States. Comparatively, the Paris Agreement has had more success,
according to Stavins, because it encouraged action from all signatories, subsequently
inspiring a “broad scale of participation.” But at COP25, many vulnerable
nations framed these long-running points of conflict around more contemporary
shifts in the climate: they reiterated their desire to set new climate targets
as prescribed by the Paris Agreement, but emphasized that such goals are too
financially perilous if natural disasters continue straining their economies.
While the world’s leading economies emphasized “ambition,”
low-lying island nations made clear their more imminent priority is survival.
Already, negotiators for
developing nations have signaled a refusal to walk back their positions at
COP26 later this year. But beyond even the potential for a future
share-of-proceeds tax or a loss-and-damage mechanism, the intensity of debates
at COP25 suggest that future discussions might continue to be framed in terms
of what the world’s leading economies owe to more vulnerable ones. If the
currently dire projections for rising temperatures and sea levels remain the
same, then small, developing, and island nations might amplify their calls for
a paradigm shift in how responses to climate change are financed.
Source: www.resourcesmag.org
Source: www.resourcesmag.org
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