Xi's not there? COP26 hopes dim on Chinese leader's likely absence
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[October 26, 2021]
By David Stanway
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - The leaders of most of
the world's biggest greenhouse gas emitters gather in Glasgow from
Sunday, aiming to thrash out plans and funds to tilt the planet towards
clean energy. But the man running the biggest of them all likely won't
be there.
Chinese President Xi Jinping's expected absence from the talks could
indicate that the world's biggest CO2 producer has already decided that
it has no more concessions to offer at the U.N. COP26 climate summit in
Scotland after three major pledges since last year, climate watchers
said.
Instead, China will likely be represented by vice-environment minister
Zhao Yingmin along with the veteran Xie Zhenhua, who was reappointed as
the country's top climate envoy earlier this year following a three-year
hiatus.
"One thing is clear," said Li Shuo, senior climate adviser with
Greenpeace in Beijing. "COP26 needs high-level support from China as
well as other emitters."
The head of the world's third-biggest source of climate-warming
emissions, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has committed to
attending the COP26 summit, which runs from Oct. 31 to Nov. 12. Like
other leaders, he will come under pressure from summit organisers to
commit to quicker emissions cuts and set a target date to reach carbon
neutrality - a target set by Xi for 2060 in a surprise move last year.
But China will be unwilling to be seen yielding to international
pressure for more ambitious goals, according to one environmental
consultant, especially as it grapples with a crippling energy supply
crunch at home. Beijing is "already maxed out", said the consultant,
speaking on condition of anonymity citing the sensitivity of the matter.
Though there has been no official announcement, analysts and diplomatic
sources said few had been expecting Xi to attend COP26 in person. He has
already missed several high-profile global summits since the COVID-19
outbreak began in late 2019, and didn't physically attend the Global
Biodiversity Conference in China's Kunming earlier this month.
They also said Xi was unlikely to lend his physical presence - a virtual
video appearance remains a possibility - to a meeting that had little
prospect of any significant breakthrough, especially after China brushed
off U.S. attempts to treat climate as a 'standalone' issue that could be
separated from the broader diplomatic disputes between the two sides.
Rather than making more concessions, China and India's top priority is
to secure a strong financing deal allowing richer countries to meet
their Paris Agreement commitment to provide $100 billion per year to
help pay for climate adaptation and transfer clean technology in the
developing world. Xi did attend the Paris summit in person in 2015.
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A giant screen shows news footage of Chinese President Xi Jinping
attending a video summit on climate change with German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron, at a shopping
street in Beijing, China April 16, 2021. REUTERS/Florence Lo
DOMESTIC CONCERNS
Although Xi has not travelled outside China since before the
pandemic, he has made three major climate announcements on the
international stage.
His unexpected net zero commitment came in a video address to the
United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in September 2020. That
announcement encouraged enterprises, industry sectors and even other
countries to respond with their own net-zero action plans.
Xi also said in a message to the U.S.-led Leaders Summit on Climate
in April that China would start cutting coal consumption by 2026.
And he used this year's UNGA to announce an immediate end to
overseas coal financing, a major bone of contention.
Like India, China has been under pressure to add more ambition to
its updated "nationally determined contributions" (NDCs) on climate
change, which are due to be announced before the Glasgow talks
begin.
However, the revisions are expected to focus on implementing the
targets that have already been announced, rather than making them
more ambitious.
China has repeatedly stressed that its climate policies are designed
to serve its own domestic priorities, and will not be pursued at the
expense of national security and public welfare.
Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmental
Affairs, a Beijing-based non-government group that monitors
corporate pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, said China already
had enough climate challenges to deal with and has little leeway to
go further in Glasgow.
"With all the headwinds and all the pledges that have been made, it
is important to take stock and consolidate," he said.
"It's not enough to put these (commitments) on paper," he added. "We
have to translate them into solid actions."
(Reporting by David Stanway; Additional reporting by Neha Arora in
New Delhi; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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