After U.N. meeting, countries brace for COP28 fossil fuel fight
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[September 25, 2023]
By Valerie Volcovici and Kate Abnett
(Reuters) -With two months left until the U.N.'s COP28 summit, countries
are far from bridging the gap between those demanding a deal to phase
out planet-warming fossil fuels and nations insisting on preserving a
role for coal, oil and natural gas.
The COP28 conference in Dubai scheduled between Nov. 30 and Dec. 12 is
seen as a crucial opportunity for governments to accelerate action to
limit global warming, yet countries remain split over the future of
fossil fuels - the burning of which is the main cause of climate change.
Meetings at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) last week
reignited the long-rumbling debate, with climate-vulnerable nations like
the Marshall Islands pleading for wealthier ones to quit polluting fuels
and to invest in renewable alternatives.
"Humanity has opened the gates to hell" by heating the planet, U.N.
Secretary General Antonio Guterres told a one-day climate summit held
alongside the general assembly, where he lamented the "naked greed" of
fossil fuel interests.
Other countries that produce or rely on fossil fuels emphasized the
potential use of technologies to "abate" - meaning capture - their
emissions, rather than ending the use of such fuels completely.
Saying that "the phase down of fossil fuels is inevitable," the United
Arab Emirates' incoming COP28 President Sultan Al Jaber told the summit:
"As we build an energy system free of all unabated fossil fuels,
including coal, we must rapidly and comprehensively decarbonize the
energies we use today."
China, the world's biggest fossil fuel consumer, is among those
signaling that it intends to keep using them for decades.
The United States has said it supports a phase out of unabated fossil
fuels - while acknowledging some developing countries' plans to invest
in them in the near term - though U.S. climate envoy John Kerry has
questioned whether emissions capturing technologies can be scaled up
fast enough.
While a COP28 pact to reduce fossil fuel use would not prompt an
immediate exit from oil and gas, the European Union and other supporters
say it is vital for guiding national policies and investments away from
polluting energy.
"It's not that this is going to happen tomorrow," Spain's Climate
Minister Teresa Ribera told Reuters. "But we need to ensure that we are
creating the conditions to make this possible."
WAR OF WORDS
Given the divisions over the future of fossil fuels since more than 80
countries unsuccessfully pushed for a deal on a phase-down at last
year's COP27 summit, negotiators are turning to new terminologies in
search of a compromise.
In what appeared in April to be a possible breakthrough, the Group of
Seven industrialized nations agreed to speed up the "phase-out of
unabated fossil fuels".
By inserting "unabated" before fossil fuels, the pledge targeted only
fuels burned without emissions-capturing technology.
But by July, the pledge faltered as the larger G20 - which includes oil
and gas producers like Saudi Arabia and Russia - failed to reach
consensus on the issue.
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Activists mark the start of Climate Week in New York during a
demonstration calling for the U.S. government to take action on
climate change and reject the use of fossil fuels in New York City,
New York, U.S., September 17, 2023. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Ireland's Climate Minister Eamon Ryan said the question of phasing
out all fossil fuels or just the emissions would likely be the
trickiest issue at COP28.
"Some people are rightly fearful that that could just be a carte
blanche to continue the exploration of oil and gas and coal," Ryan
told Reuters, of the debate around emissions capturing technology.
A group of 17 countries including France, Kenya, Chile, Colombia and
the Pacific island nations of Tuvalu and Vanuatu last week called
for a fossil fuel phase-out that limits the use of carbon-capture
technology.
"We cannot use it to green-light fossil fuel expansion," the
countries said in a joint statement.
Oil and gas industry groups like the American Petroleum Institute
have said the world will need emissions abatement technologies in
order to provide "more energy with fewer emissions."
Some developing countries are also resisting a phase-out, saying
they need fossil fuels to expand their electricity capacity for
economic development - in the same way nations like Japan and the
United States have done.
Within the African Union, some governments have accused the West of
hypocrisy for using climate arguments to refuse financing for gas
projects in developing nations, while continuing to burn gas at
home.
KEEPING 1.5 ALIVE
Without a rapid decrease in fossil fuel use, the Earth will heat up
beyond the global target of 1.5 degrees Celsius - compared with
pre-industrial levels - within 10-15 years, said climate scientist
Peter Cox at the University of Exeter.
"You can't have it both ways. We can't say we want to avoid 1.5 C
... and not say anything about phasing out fossil fuels," Cox said.
The head of the International Energy Agency this month said that
demand for coal, gas and oil would peak by 2030 as renewable energy
capacity grows.
"Leave aside the climate risk. There is now a business risk," Fatih
Birol told an event hosted by the Rockefeller Foundation. He urged
countries to stop making new investments in coal, oil and gas.
The comments drew ire from the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), which disputed Birol's projections for
not including emissions-capturing possibilities and described his
call for an end to new investments "dangerous."
The Alliance of Small Island States, whose members face
climate-fuelled storms and land loss to rising seas, wants a fossil
fuel phase-out and an end to the $7 trillion governments spend
annually on subsidising fossil fuels.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici in the United Nations and
Washington, D.C., and Kate Abnett in Brussels; Editing by Katy
Daigle and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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