The Prague Post - UN climate talks enter home stretch split over money

EUR -
AED 4.328076
AFN 77.196987
ALL 96.978789
AMD 446.737554
ANG 2.109624
AOA 1080.692392
ARS 1690.455255
AUD 1.714016
AWG 2.123082
AZN 2.008143
BAM 1.963059
BBD 2.372775
BDT 144.143008
BGN 1.979151
BHD 0.444326
BIF 3489.845793
BMD 1.178508
BND 1.507187
BOB 8.142805
BRL 6.23907
BSD 1.178056
BTN 108.16448
BWP 16.344702
BYN 3.335801
BYR 23098.759435
BZD 2.369867
CAD 1.617456
CDF 2569.148159
CHF 0.926961
CLF 0.025957
CLP 1024.925421
CNY 8.218449
CNH 8.197543
COP 4295.70929
CRC 583.056147
CUC 1.178508
CUP 31.230466
CVE 110.69643
CZK 24.253403
DJF 209.444929
DKK 7.467983
DOP 74.224483
DZD 152.769943
EGP 55.574206
ERN 17.677622
ETB 183.549505
FJD 2.652002
FKP 0.873623
GBP 0.866622
GEL 3.170647
GGP 0.873623
GHS 12.844168
GIP 0.873623
GMD 86.031513
GNF 10321.314016
GTQ 9.044326
GYD 246.530833
HKD 9.189871
HNL 31.075919
HRK 7.532675
HTG 154.54429
HUF 382.155427
IDR 19789.508593
ILS 3.694447
IMP 0.873623
INR 108.176209
IQD 1543.407536
IRR 49644.655348
ISK 145.793696
JEP 0.873623
JMD 185.484484
JOD 0.835609
JPY 184.37937
KES 151.886582
KGS 103.06007
KHR 4742.544022
KMF 494.973829
KPW 1060.668137
KRW 1710.086465
KWD 0.361308
KYD 0.982027
KZT 593.189455
LAK 25464.570091
LBP 105521.456212
LKR 364.979698
LRD 217.991453
LSL 19.015018
LTL 3.479829
LVL 0.712868
LYD 7.497284
MAD 10.793366
MDL 20.055163
MGA 5330.84436
MKD 61.871665
MMK 2474.620729
MNT 4202.8741
MOP 9.464488
MRU 47.101181
MUR 54.105754
MVR 18.208396
MWK 2043.28085
MXN 20.527927
MYR 4.720519
MZN 75.318899
NAD 19.015018
NGN 1674.731214
NIO 43.35031
NOK 11.558036
NPR 173.062967
NZD 1.987778
OMR 0.453137
PAB 1.178408
PEN 3.952316
PGK 5.039642
PHP 69.522597
PKR 329.634291
PLN 4.205771
PYG 7879.77762
QAR 4.29608
RON 5.092692
RSD 117.390062
RUB 88.976957
RWF 1718.634689
SAR 4.419135
SBD 9.573741
SCR 17.480412
SDG 708.876975
SEK 10.590994
SGD 1.501956
SHP 0.884186
SLE 28.75992
SLL 24712.725461
SOS 672.225646
SRD 44.925953
STD 24392.738984
STN 24.590938
SVC 10.310271
SYP 13033.798977
SZL 19.014349
THB 36.589736
TJS 11.017775
TMT 4.124778
TND 3.429683
TOP 2.837565
TRY 51.106058
TTD 8.002594
TWD 37.06385
TZS 3011.088678
UAH 50.808321
UGX 4164.399991
USD 1.178508
UYU 44.623918
UZS 14298.877386
VES 415.147657
VND 30929.945988
VUV 141.50141
WST 3.256437
XAF 658.526344
XAG 0.011639
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.184978
XCG 2.123704
XDR 0.818309
XOF 658.523539
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.842718
ZAR 19.032086
ZMK 10607.991644
ZMW 23.117392
ZWL 379.479138
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    16.8

    -1.01%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    83.95

    -1.86%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.7

    +0.21%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.67

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    2.4880

    89.788

    +2.77%

  • NGG

    0.9300

    81.11

    +1.15%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    48.8

    +0.31%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.09

    +0.21%

  • VOD

    0.1850

    14.125

    +1.31%

  • RELX

    -0.0750

    39.765

    -0.19%

  • BTI

    0.7300

    58.95

    +1.24%

  • BCE

    0.4050

    25.115

    +1.61%

  • AZN

    0.5500

    92.24

    +0.6%

  • BP

    1.0100

    36.44

    +2.77%

UN climate talks enter home stretch split over money
UN climate talks enter home stretch split over money / Photo: Ludovic MARIN - AFP/File

UN climate talks enter home stretch split over money

COP27 entered its final week Monday with countries that grew rich burning fossil fuels and developing nations reeling from climate impacts at loggerheads over how to speed and fund reductions in carbon pollution.

Text size:

Somewhere in the middle, China -- accounting for 30 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, by far the largest share -- is feeling pressure from both sides, not only to enhance its carbon cutting goals but to step up as a donor nation, negotiators and analysts say.

At last year's UN climate summit in Glasgow, nearly 200 countries vowed to "keep alive" the Paris Agreement's aspirational goal of capping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Nearly 1.2C of warming so far has seen a cascade of increasingly severe climate disasters, such as the flooding that left a third of Pakistan under water this summer, claiming at least 1,700 lives and inflicting $30 to $40 billion in damage.

The Glasgow Pact urged nations to ramp up their emissions reduction commitments ahead of this year's critical summit in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

But with the exception of Australia and Mexico, only a handful of smaller economies heeded the call, leaving the world on track to hot up by about 2.5C -- enough, scientists say, to trigger dangerous tipping points in Earth's climate system.

At the COP27's midpoint, little has changed.

"Parties are basically staring each other down, thinking they have done their part and waiting for the other side to move," said the head of WWF France, Pierre Canet.

- 'Make our lives easier' -

As ministers arrive to cut through political knots above the pay grade of front-line negotiators, focus will turn to a crucial "decisions" document that will reveal the consensus reached -- or not.

"All the big political crunch issues are unresolved," said Alden Meyer, a senior analyst at climate think tank E3G.

To accelerate decarbonisation, many developing nations -- including small island states whose very existence is threatened by rising seas -- favour a deepened commitment to the 1.5C target, with specific mention of the fossil fuels that drive emissions.

US special envoy for climate John Kerry on Friday called out countries "whose 2030 goals are not yet aligned with the Paris temperature goal," a thinly veiled allusion to China.

A reality-check report released at COP27 last week showed CO2 emissions -- which must decline nearly 50 percent by 2030 to keep the 1.5C target in play -- from coal, gas and oil are on track to hit record levels in 2022.

But China and India have objected to such efforts, with Beijing pointing out that the binding target agreed in Paris was "well below" 2C, not 1.5C.

Negotiators in Sharm el-Sheikh will look to a bilateral meeting Monday in Bali between China's Xi Jinping and US President Joe Biden, along with the communique from a G20 meeting both will subsequently attend, for signals that could break the deadlock in Egypt.

"Confirming the 1.5C goal in Bali would make our lives easier," a senior negotiator at the climate talks said.

- 'Polluters must pay' -

When it comes to money, the spotlight in Egypt is on so-called loss and damage, UN-speak for unavoidable losses -- of life, property and cultural heritage -- due to climate impacts that have already happened.

Rich nations fearful of creating an open-ended liability regime agreed this year for the first time to include this thorny topic on the formal agenda.

Developing nations are calling for the creation of a separate facility, but the US and the European Union -- while not precluding such an outcome -- have said they favour using existing financial channels.

"This is the highest profile, most political issue at the COP" said Meyer.

Another track of the talks, meanwhile, has opened on how much money the Global South will get -- after current pledges of $100 billion a year expire in 2024 -- to help green their economies and prepare for future warming.

As it becomes clear that financial needs will be measured in trillions of dollars rather than billions, other options -- some of them in parallel to the UN process -- have emerged.

These range from expanding access to IMF and World Bank funds, to broadening the base of donor nations to include China, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and other nations.

"China and India are major polluters, and the polluter must pay," Gaston Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda, said last week during the COP27 summit, speaking for the AOSIS coalition of small island states.

"I don't think there are free passes for any country."

Y.Blaha--TPP