The Prague Post - CO2 cuts v. cash: Climate talks stymied by stand-off

EUR -
AED 4.29814
AFN 80.739901
ALL 98.052062
AMD 449.160419
ANG 2.094318
AOA 1073.079199
ARS 1513.681829
AUD 1.792628
AWG 2.106372
AZN 1.992419
BAM 1.962873
BBD 2.359904
BDT 142.152228
BGN 1.96108
BHD 0.441221
BIF 3483.307019
BMD 1.170207
BND 1.499183
BOB 8.075928
BRL 6.502803
BSD 1.168812
BTN 100.842079
BWP 16.699819
BYN 3.824833
BYR 22936.051241
BZD 2.34773
CAD 1.602265
CDF 3377.216853
CHF 0.933006
CLF 0.029283
CLP 1123.621202
CNY 8.399686
CNH 8.39281
COP 4703.002201
CRC 589.725002
CUC 1.170207
CUP 31.010477
CVE 110.663763
CZK 24.625808
DJF 207.914753
DKK 7.463602
DOP 70.69474
DZD 152.106522
EGP 57.635136
ERN 17.5531
ETB 162.429525
FJD 2.632673
FKP 0.872335
GBP 0.866801
GEL 3.171255
GGP 0.872335
GHS 12.21375
GIP 0.872335
GMD 83.671849
GNF 10141.543806
GTQ 8.976345
GYD 244.433475
HKD 9.185936
HNL 30.588221
HRK 7.540462
HTG 153.370686
HUF 399.02702
IDR 19079.225502
ILS 3.921181
IMP 0.872335
INR 100.92787
IQD 1531.117193
IRR 49280.319192
ISK 142.438015
JEP 0.872335
JMD 186.903484
JOD 0.829679
JPY 172.452776
KES 151.003505
KGS 102.334345
KHR 4688.795327
KMF 495.348171
KPW 1053.186493
KRW 1618.899626
KWD 0.357299
KYD 0.973989
KZT 619.634835
LAK 25206.289264
LBP 104719.908107
LKR 352.676305
LRD 234.329371
LSL 20.737625
LTL 3.455316
LVL 0.707846
LYD 6.343859
MAD 10.566575
MDL 19.86315
MGA 5198.666117
MKD 61.782626
MMK 2457.286386
MNT 4195.957769
MOP 9.449732
MRU 46.493534
MUR 53.467418
MVR 18.022239
MWK 2026.676903
MXN 21.818305
MYR 4.956412
MZN 74.846862
NAD 20.737625
NGN 1792.311946
NIO 43.014999
NOK 11.88648
NPR 161.347327
NZD 1.957948
OMR 0.449949
PAB 1.168787
PEN 4.167517
PGK 4.912702
PHP 66.793647
PKR 332.950177
PLN 4.244703
PYG 8889.030529
QAR 4.272194
RON 5.072497
RSD 117.164546
RUB 91.536704
RWF 1688.834998
SAR 4.390008
SBD 9.711366
SCR 16.552465
SDG 702.706015
SEK 11.202483
SGD 1.49842
SHP 0.919599
SLE 26.790291
SLL 24538.65393
SOS 667.898128
SRD 42.917255
STD 24220.915969
STN 24.588602
SVC 10.226851
SYP 15214.901917
SZL 20.730434
THB 37.711058
TJS 11.178948
TMT 4.107426
TND 3.433874
TOP 2.740739
TRY 47.262741
TTD 7.934489
TWD 34.360194
TZS 3060.090073
UAH 48.918873
UGX 4188.091272
USD 1.170207
UYU 47.190044
UZS 14700.97315
VES 136.873209
VND 30606.756133
VUV 140.178513
WST 3.097422
XAF 658.315093
XAG 0.030065
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.162542
XCG 2.106363
XDR 0.821742
XOF 658.329208
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.07863
ZAR 20.74973
ZMK 10533.262438
ZMW 26.881289
ZWL 376.806079
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

CO2 cuts v. cash: Climate talks stymied by stand-off
CO2 cuts v. cash: Climate talks stymied by stand-off / Photo: INA FASSBENDER - AFP/File

CO2 cuts v. cash: Climate talks stymied by stand-off

Pressure to speed cuts in carbon pollution took a back seat at UN climate talks that ended late Thursday night, as emerging economies, including China, demanded that rich ones vastly scale up climate financing.

Text size:

The stand-off over 10 days of technical negotiations in Bonn stymied progress across a raft of issues, including how to minimise the social costs of transitioning to clean energy, how to quantify countries' adaptation needs, and how to help economies already devastated by climate-amplified extreme weather.

This puts even more pressure on the COP28 climate summit in oil-rich United Arab Emirates in December. There, nearly 200 nations will review a "global stocktake" of how far off track the world is from achieving the Paris climate treaty goal of capping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Under current policies, the planet will warm nearly twice that much by 2100, according to the UN's climate science advisory panel.

"Climate change is not a North versus South issue," UN Climate chief Simon Stiell said at the closing plenary on Thursday.

"This is a tidal wave that doesn't discriminate. The only way we can avoid being swallowed by it is investing in climate action."

A long-standing tug-of-war at UN climate talks pits the European Union against a powerful negotiating bloc: the Like-Minded Developing Countries (LMDC), which includes China, India and Saudi Arabia.

The EU, along with some of the world's poorest and most climate-vulnerable nations, seeks an accelerated timetable for slashing greenhouse gases, and wants the consensus-based UN forum to call for the phasing out of fossil fuels.

But their drive for more ambitious reductions is undercut by the yawning gap between the comparatively small amounts of money mobilised by rich nations historically responsible for global warming and the trillions needed by developing nations to green their economies and cope with existing climate impacts, or "loss and damage".

- From billions to trillions -

"The difficulties of making substantive progress on loss and damages reflect the reluctance of developed countries on getting into real engagement," Cuba's lead negotiator said Thursday, speaking on behalf of the G77 + China negotiating bloc, which comprises 134 countries and 80 percent of the world's population.

Confidence in the US, Canada, Europe, Japan and other wealthy nations has been further undermined by the failure to deliver on a promise first made in 2009 to provide the developing world $100 billion a year by 2020.

"We stand by our climate finance commitments," a delegate from the European Union insisted, pointing to a report jointly authored by Canada and Germany saying the $100 billion promise would finally be kept in 2023.

More crucial still, rich nations say, will be tapping into the private finance that can leverage billions into trillions.

That objective will be front and centre next week in Paris at the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact, hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron.

- 'Missed opportunity' -

More broadly, accelerating action will dominate a September climate summit in New York hosted by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who decried on Thursday the lack of progress to date.

"Countries are far off track," he said. "I see a lack of ambition; a lack of trust; a lack of support; a lack of cooperation."

Guterres also took aim at what he called "the polluted heart of the climate crisis: the fossil fuel industry".

"Let's face facts," he said. "The problem is not simply fossil fuel emissions. It's fossil fuels, period."

The UN chief's words were starkly at odds with those of embattled COP28 president -- and head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company -- Sultan al-Jaber, who suggested last month that fossil fuel emissions could be reduced through carbon capture technologies.

In a stopover at the talks in Bonn, however, he said for the first time that the "phase-down" of fossil fuels was "inevitable".

But al-Jaber failed to outline a roadmap or his expectations for COP28.

"It's time to shift out of listening mode into action mode," said Alden Meyer, a senior analyst at climate policy think tank E3G. "It was a bit of a missed opportunity not to do so here."

The stalemate in Bonn does not bode well for COP28, others said.

"The gap between the Bonn political performance and the harsh climate reality feels already absurd," said Li Shuo, a senior global policy adviser at Greenpeace East Asia.

"Climate impacts stay no longer on paper. People are feeling and suffering from it now."

M.Jelinek--TPP