COP27 climate summit to test resolve of world battling war, inflation
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[October 31, 2022]
By Valerie Volcovici
(Reuters) - An international climate summit
starting next week in Egypt will test the resolve of nations to combat
global warming, even as many of the biggest players are distracted by
urgent crises ranging from war in Europe to rampant consumer inflation.
More than 30,000 delegates, including representatives from some 200
countries, will gather Nov. 6-18 in the seaside resort town of Sharm
el-Sheikh to hash out details around how to slow climate change and help
those already feeling its impacts.
But with nations dealing with the fallout of Russia's invasion of
Ukraine, along with soaring food and fuel prices and stuttering economic
growth, questions loom over whether they will act quickly and
ambitiously enough to avoid the worst effects of climate change.
The chill in relations this year between top greenhouse gas emitters
China and the United States does not bode well, experts say.
A United Nations report released last week showed most countries are
lagging on their existing commitments to cut carbon output, with global
greenhouse gas emissions on track to rise 10.6% by 2030 compared with
2010 levels.
Scientists say emissions must drop 43% by that time to limit global
warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit)above
pre-industrial temperatures – the threshold above which climate change
risks spinning out of control.
Only 24 of the nearly 200 countries attending the COP27 talks have
submitted new or updated emissions-cutting plans since last year's U.N.
climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, even though all had committed
to doing so, according to the U.N. climate agency.
A few countries, including Chile, Mexico and Turkey, are expected to
release new plans during the Egypt conference, but it is unclear if any
major developing economies like China and India will be among them.
"The chance for China to make another major move ahead of COP27 is low,"
said Li Shuo, a China climate expert at environmental group Greenpeace,
who is familiar with the government's thinking.
Alden Meyer, international climate policy expert at E3G, said the
fraying of diplomatic ties between Washington and Beijing over issues
including Taiwan and the war in Ukraine were a headwind for global
climate progress, noting past collaboration between the two had helped
boost climate talks.
"Is it possible to make progress without the U.S. and China
collaborating? Yes, it is, but it's not easier," he said.
The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden, meanwhile, has been
urging U.S. and international oil and gas drillers to ramp up production
to address tight global markets, lower consumer prices and offset supply
disruptions linked to Russia's war on Ukraine - showing how the energy
crunch has changed the policy priorities of a president who had
campaigned on a promise to quickly put an end to the fossil fuel era.
The U.S. delegation to the U.N. conference is likely to tout Biden's
legislative victories on climate change, including passage of the
Inflation Reduction Act, which included billions of dollars in subsidies
for wind and solar power and electric vehicles.
LOSS AND DAMAGE
The two-week U.N. negotiations in Egypt follow a year of wild weather
disruptions around the world, as global warming takes a toll - from the
devastating floods in Pakistan, South Africa and Nigeria, to heatwaves
in the Arctic and across Europe and record-setting droughts in the
American West and France.
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View of a COP27 sign on the road leading
to the conference area in Egypt's Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh
town as the city prepares to host the COP27 summit next month, in
Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt October 20, 2022. REUTERS/Sayed Sheasha/File
Photo
The talks are likely to address how these and other nations affected
by climate change could be compensated by rich countries believed to
have caused it. Other topics will include how international
financial institutions like the World Bank could be reformed to
speed the transition away from fossil fuels.
The issue of mobilizing new funding to compensate for climate-driven
destruction is a contentious one, with rich nations, including the
United States and European Union members, having opposed past
proposals for a "loss and damage" fund over concerns about their
liabilities.
U.S. Special Envoy on Climate Change John Kerry said last week the
United States supports a serious dialogue on the topic at COP27, but
said the issue was tricky given upcoming Congressional elections
that could swing the legislative body toward Republican control.
He also pointed out that the United States is the biggest donor of
global humanitarian aid and will focus on ramping up spending on
climate adaptation.
That message rings hollow for some.
"I don't want to hear political rhetoric about loss and damage. I
don't want to hear what countries are already doing in terms of
disaster relief, because it's not enough," said Aminath Shauna,
climate minister for the Maldives, a low-lying Indian Ocean island
chain facing future inundation with sea-level rise.
The talks received a boost from Brazil's election on Sunday of
leftist leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, whose team has decried
deforestation while calling for an international summit on the fate
of the Amazon.
The talks could also highlight natural gas, given its importance to
the host continent. African nations with petroleum riches argue they
have a right to develop their resources, especially as Europe is
scrambling to find new suppliers to replace Russia.
"African nations are going to call out the hypocrisy of Europe
securing gas deals in the name of energy security while telling
African nations not to develop their resources for baseload energy,"
said Lily Odarno, director of the Clean Air Task Force's Africa
climate program.
Egypt's lead climate negotiator, Mohamed Nasr, has said the summit's
success would be measured by whether countries deliver a package of
agreements that keep the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5C
alive, while ensuring poorer nations are treated fairly and receive
the support that rich countries have promised.
"Climate change is not giving us any space to breathe," Nasr said.
"Science is telling us we are not on track on anything."
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Richard Valdmanis, Katy
Daigle and Janet Lawrence)
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