COP27 delivers climate fund breakthrough at cost of progress on
emissions
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[November 21, 2022]
By Valerie Volcovici, Dominic Evans and William James
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (Reuters) - Countries closed this year's U.N.
climate summit on Sunday with a hard-fought deal to create a fund to
help poor countries being battered by climate disasters, even as many
lamented its lack of ambition in tackling the emissions causing them.
The deal was widely lauded as a triumph for responding to the
devastating impact that global warming is already having on vulnerable
countries. But many countries said they felt pressured to give up on
tougher commitments for limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius
in order for the landmark deal on the loss and damage fund to go
through.
Delegates - worn out after intense, overnight negotiations - made no
objections as Egypt’s COP27 President Sameh Shoukry rattled through the
final agenda items and gavelled the deal through.
Despite having no agreement for a stronger commitment to the 1.5 C goal
set in the 2015 Paris Agreement, "we went with what the agreement was
here because we want to stand with the most vulnerable," Germany's
climate secretary Jennifer Morgan, visibly shaken, told Reuters.
When asked by Reuters whether the goal of stronger climate-fighting
ambition had been compromised for the deal, Mexico's chief climate
negotiator Camila Zepeda summed up the mood among exhausted negotiators.
"Probably. You take a win when you can."
LOSS AND DAMAGE
The deal for a loss and damage fund marked a diplomatic coup for small
islands and other vulnerable nations in winning over the 27-nation
European Union and the United States, which had long resisted the idea
for fear that such a fund could open them to legal liability for
historic emissions.
Those concerns were assuaged with language in the agreement calling for
the funds to come from a variety of existing sources, including
financial institutions, rather than relying on rich nations to pay in.
The climate envoy from the Marshall Islands said she was "worn out" but
happy with the fund's approval. "So many people all this week told us we
wouldn't get it," Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner said. "So glad they were wrong."
But it likely will be several years before the fund exists, with the
agreement setting out only a roadmap for resolving lingering questions
including who would oversee the fund, how the money would be dispersed –
and to whom.
U.S. special climate envoy John Kerry, who was not at the weekend
negotiations in person after testing positive for COVID-19, on Sunday
welcomed the deal to "establish arrangements to respond to the
devastating impact of climate change on vulnerable communities around
the world."
In a statement, he said he would continue to press major emitters like
China to "significantly enhance their ambition" in keeping the 1.5 C
goal alive.
FOSSIL FUEL FIZZLE
The price paid for a deal on the loss and damage fund was most evident
in the language around emission reductions and reducing the use of
polluting fossil fuels – known in the parlance of U.N. climate
negotiations as "mitigation."
Last year's COP26 summit in Glasgow, Scotland, had focused on a theme of
keeping the 1.5C goal alive – as scientists warn that warming beyond
that threshold would see climate change spiral to extremes.
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Delegates applaud as COP27 President
Sameh Shoukry delivers a statement during the closing plenary at the
COP27 climate summit in Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt,
November 20, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Countries were asked then to update their national climate targets
before this year’s Egypt summit. Only a fraction of the nearly 200
parties did so.
While praising the loss and damage deal, many countries decried
COP27’s failure to push mitigation further and said some countries
were trying to roll back commitments made in the Glasgow Climate
Pact.
"We had to fight relentlessly to hold the line of Glasgow," a
visibly frustrated Alok Sharma, architect of the Glasgow deal, told
the summit.
He listed off a number of ambition-boosting measures that were
stymied in the negotiations for the final COP27 deal in Egypt:
"Emissions peaking before 2025 as the science tells us is necessary?
Not in this text. Clear follow-through on the phase down of coal?
Not in this text. A clear commitment to phase out all fossil fuels?
Not in this text."
On fossil fuels, the COP27 deal text largely repeats wording from
Glasgow, calling up parties to accelerate "efforts towards the
phasedown of unabated coal power and phase-out of inefficient fossil
fuel subsidies."
Efforts to include a commitment to phase out, or at least phase
down, all fossil fuels were thwarted.
A separate "mitigation work programme" agreement, also approved on
Sunday, contained several clauses that some parties, including the
European Union, felt weakened commitment to ever more ambitious
emissions-cutting targets.
Critics pointed to a section which they said undermined the Glasgow
commitment to regularly renew emissions targets – with language
saying the work programme would "not impose new targets or goals".
Another section of the COP27 deal dropped the idea of annual target
renewal in favour of returning to a longer five-year cycle set out
in the Paris pact.
"It is more than frustrating to see overdue steps on mitigation and
the phase-out of fossil energies being stonewalled by a number of
large emitters and oil producers," German Foreign Minister Annalena
Baerbock said.
The deal also included a reference to "low-emissions energy,"
raising concern among some that it opened the door to the growing
use of natural gas - a fossil fuel that leads to both carbon dioxide
and methane emissions.
"It does not break with Glasgow completely, but it doesn't raise
ambition at all," Norway's Climate Minister Espen Barth Eide told
reporters.
The climate minister of the Maldives, which faces future inundation
from climate-driven sea level rise, lamented the lack of ambition on
curbing emissions.
"I recognise the progress we made in COP27" with the loss and damage
fund, Aminath Shauna told the plenary. But "we have failed on
mitigation ... We have to ensure that we increase ambition to peak
emissions by 2025. We have to phase out fossil fuel."
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici, Dominic Evans and William James;
Writing by Katy Daigle)
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