UN talks fail to reach agreement on dealing with rising risk of global
drought
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[December 14, 2024]
By SIBI ARASU
BENGALURU, India (AP) — Despite two weeks of U.N.-sponsored talks in
Saudi Arabia’s Riyadh, the participating 197 nations failed to agree
early Saturday on a plan to deal with global droughts, made longer and
more severe by a warming climate.
The biennial talks, known as COP 16 and organized by a UN body that
deals with combating desertification and droughts, attempted to create
strong global mandates to legally bind and require nations to fund early
warning systems and build resilient infrastructure in poorer countries,
particularly Africa, which is worst affected by the changes.
The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification released a
report earlier this week warning that if global warming trends continue,
nearly five billion people — including in most of Europe, parts of the
western U.S., Brazil, eastern Asia and central Africa — will be affected
by the drying of Earth’s lands by the end of the century, up from a
quarter of the world’s population today. The report also said farming
was particularly at risk, which can lead to food insecurity for
communities worldwide.
This is the fourth time UN talks aimed at getting countries to agree to
make more headway on tackling biodiversity loss, climate change and
plastic pollution have either failed to reach a consensus or delivered
disappointing results this year, worrying many nations, particularly the
most vulnerable.
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Nations participating in the Riyadh discussions decided to push the can
down the road to the 2026 talks, hosted by Mongolia.
“Parties need more time to agree on what’s the best way forward to
address the critical issue of drought,” said Ibrahim Thiaw, the UNCCD
chief, speaking at the end of the Riyadh talks.
Thiaw said the conference was “like no other” in the talks' 30-year
history. “We have elevated the land and drought agenda beyond
sector-specific discussions, establishing it as a cornerstone of global
efforts to address inter-connected challenges such as climate change,
biodiversity loss, food insecurity, migration and global security.”
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Sunflowers appear wilted in a field amid a drought near the town of
Becej, Serbia, Sept. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic, File)
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Longer-lasting solutions to drought — such as the curbing of climate
change — were not a talking point.
Host Saudi Arabia has been criticized in the past for stalling
progress on curbing emissions from fossil fuels at other
negotiations. The Gulf nation is one of the world’s largest oil
producers and exporters with the second-largest global oil reserves.
Earlier in the conference, hosts Saudi Arabia, a few other countries
and international banks pledged $2.15 billion for drought
resilience. And the Arab Coordination Group, made up of 10
development banks based in the Middle East, committed $10 billion by
2030 to address degrading land, desertification and drought. The
funds are expected to support 80 of the most vulnerable countries
prepare for worsening drought conditions.
But the U.N. estimates that between 2007 and 2017, droughts will
cost $125 billion worldwide.
Erika Gomez, lead negotiator from Panama said while a decision on
dealing with drought was not reached, significant progress was made
in other key issues.
“We have achieved several key milestones, particularly in the
growing traction of civil society engagement and the gender
decision,” Gomez said. “Until the very end, parties could not agree
on whether or not the new instrument to respond to drought should be
legally binding or not,” said Jes Weigelt of European climate
think-tank TMG Research who has been tracking the talks.
“I fear, the UNCCD COP 16 has suffered the same fate as the
biodiversity and climate COPs this year. It failed to deliver,” he
said.
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