Climate change compensation fight brews ahead of COP27 summit
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[August 08, 2022]
By Kate Abnett
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Tensions are mounting
ahead of this year's U.N. climate summit, as vulnerable countries ramp
up demands for rich countries to pay compensation for losses inflicted
on the world’s poorest people by climate change.
When diplomats from nearly 200 countries meet on Nov. 7 in the beachside
resort town of Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, negotiations will tackle how to
cut the CO2 emissions causing climate change and cope with existing
climate impacts, including deadly heatwaves, wildfires, rising seas and
drought.
But another issue is likely to dominate the talks: “loss and damage,” or
climate-related destruction to homes, infrastructure and livelihoods in
the poorest countries that have contributed least to global warming.
The world's 46 least developed countries, home to 14% of the global
population, produce just 1% of the world's annual CO2 emissions from
burning fossil fuels, according to the U.N..
As COP27 approaches, climate losses are surging - in rich and poor
countries alike. In recent weeks, wildfires have swallowed huge swathes
of land in Morocco, Greece and Canada, drought has ravaged Italy's
vineyards, and fatal floods hit Gambia and China.
"That's been the critical juncture. We've been affected and talked about
it for a long time. But now rich countries are being affected as well,"
said Saleemul Huq, an adviser to the Climate Vulnerable Forum group of
55 countries.
Wealthy countries also failed to deliver a promise for $100 billion a
year by 2020 to help poor countries lower emissions and prepare for
climate change. Loss and damage payments would be in addition to that
$100 billion.
"It's not ambiguous. Finance means money. It means put your hand in your
pocket and bring out a dollar, a euro, a yen and put it on the table for
the victims of climate change," Huq said.
HOPE DESPITE HURDLES
Just getting loss and damage finance into the COP27 discussion is
proving contentious, as a proposal to add it to the agenda has not yet
won broad support.
The issue was also not added to pre-COP27 talks in June in Bonn,
Germany. Talks there on U.N. technical assistance on accounting for loss
and damage also ended without agreement, due to disputes over how that
scheme should be governed.
COP27 will be no easier, as rich countries arrive with purse strings
tightened by soaring energy costs, the economic fallout of the Ukraine
war and the COVID-19 pandemic, which prompted wealthy countries spend
trillions of dollars propping up their economies.
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Seawater floods past an ineffective sea wall into the community of
Veivatuloa Village, Fiji, July 16, 2022. Leaders of 15 low-lying
Pacific island nations declared climate change their "single
greatest existential threat" at a mid-July summit in Fiji's capital,
Suva. Facing some of the most direct effects of climate change, they
want developed nations, who contributed the most to global warming,
not only to curb their emissions but to pay for the steps that
islanders must take to protect their people from rising sea levels.
REUTERS/Loren Elliott
"It’s my hope that developing nations will galvanize their
collective voices to push for adequate treatment of loss and
damage,” said Matthew Samuda, a minister in Jamaica's economic
growth ministry who works on climate change.
Historically, rich economies including the United States and the
27-country European Union have resisted steps that could assign
legal liability or lead to compensation.
Negotiators at last year's COP26 U.N. summit agreed to launch a
two-year dialogue on loss and damage, but stopped short of setting
up an actual fund.
Putting the topic on the COP27 agenda could open up discussions on
where the money would come from, how it would be distributed or even
how to define climate-induced losses. Some research suggests such
losses could reach $580 billion per year by 2030.
"Everything's been left quite uncertain on how to rebuild the trust
between developed and developing countries," said Alex Scott,
climate diplomacy expert at think tank E3G.
Still, some resource-challenged countries hope for a breakthrough.
"We are hopeful that the international community will soon step up,"
said Madeleine Diouf Sarr, chair of the Least Developed Countries
bloc in U.N. climate negotiations, pointing to a growing
acknowledgement among rich countries of the need.
During a visit to Pacific archipelago Palau last month, for example,
Germany’s foreign minister said her country would prioritise the
issue in its own international climate policy.
"This is an issue we haven't talked enough about for a very long
time,” Annalena Baerbock said. “And it really is about financing."
(Reporting by Kate Abnett; additional reporting by Mark John;
Editing by Katy Daigle and Josie Kao)
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