G20 nations fail to agree on emission reduction targets at talks
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[July 29, 2023]
By Praveen Paramasivam and Kate Abnett
CHENNAI, India/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The Group of 20 (G20) major nations
failed on Friday to agree on concrete targets to cut dangerous
emissions, releasing only a statement that dismissed current measures to
address climate change as "insufficient".
The impasse - the latest in a string of inconclusive international
conferences - came days after scientists again raised the alarm, saying
human-induced climate change has played an "absolutely overwhelming"
role in the extreme heatwaves that have swept across North America,
Europe and China.
After three days of meetings in the southern Indian city of Chennai,
organizers released a document showing the bloc remained divided on
calls, led by developed nations, to reduce the emission of greenhouse
gases by 2025 and cut them by 60% by 2035 over 2019 levels.
Members could not agree on depleting carbon budgets, historical
emissions, net-zero goals and the issue of financing to support
developing countries, the document showed.
The Indian meeting had been seen as a chance for the world's biggest
polluters to take concrete steps ahead of a G20 leaders' meeting in
September in New Delhi and the COP28 Summit in the United Arab Emirates
in December.
Developed countries in the group had demanded mitigation of greenhouse
gas emissions to limit global warming to 1.5 Celsius, an Indian official
said.
The demands were opposed by developing countries who said the mitigation
targets - aimed at cutting or eliminating greenhouse gas emissions, or
removing them from the atmosphere - would limit their ability to develop
infrastructure and grow, the official said.
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A member of India's military force
stands guard at the G20 foreign ministers meeting in New Delhi,
India March 2, 2023. Olivier Douliery/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
China and oil-rich Saudi Arabia backed away from making commitments
in the G20 talks, members of a European delegation said.
The EU's Environment Commissioner said the G20 countries were
"nowhere" on their commitments to address climate change.
Speaking at the end of the meeting, Virginijus Sinkevicius said some
delegations had tried to walk back previous climate pledges - a
stance he said Europe could not accept.
"We were asked to make bold choices, to demonstrate courage,
commitment and leadership. But we, collectively, failed to achieve
that. We cannot be driven by the lowest common denominator, or by
narrow national interests. We cannot allow the pace of change to be
set by the slowest movers in the room," he said.
India's environment and external affairs ministries did not respond
to an email seeking comments on the commissioner's remarks.
The failure to reach an agreement comes just a week after the G20
major economies' disagreement on phasing down fossil fuels following
objections by some producer nations.
(Reporting Praveen Paramasivam in Chennai; Sarita Chaganti Singh and
Aftab Ahmed in Delhi; Kate Abnett in Brussels; editing by John
Stonestreet, Angus MacSwan and Andrew Heavens)
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