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Thursday, May 15, 2025

Backlog of undecided issues forces COP27 extension

De­ci­sion may come on Loss and Dam­age Fund

by

Kalain Hosein
909 days ago
20221118
Sameh Shoukry, left, president of the COP27 climate summit, Frans Timmermans, centre, executive vice president of the European Commission, and US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry attend a session on the Global Methane Pledge at the COP27 UN Climate Summit, on Thursday in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

Sameh Shoukry, left, president of the COP27 climate summit, Frans Timmermans, centre, executive vice president of the European Commission, and US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry attend a session on the Global Methane Pledge at the COP27 UN Climate Summit, on Thursday in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

AP

kalain.ho­sein@guardian.co.tt

A suc­cess­ful COP is one where every­one leaves un­hap­py—but what hap­pens when the COP nears fail­ure?

With mis­aligned pri­or­i­ties of de­vel­oped and de­vel­op­ing coun­tries, many of these in­ter­na­tion­al cli­mate con­fer­ences rarely pro­duce the out­comes small is­land states like Trinidad and To­ba­go des­per­ate­ly need to fight the cli­mate cri­sis. In­stead, such ac­tiv­i­ties usu­al­ly pro­duce wa­tered-down, com­pro­mised cli­mate pol­i­cy and fi­nanc­ing fa­cil­i­ties de­vel­oped with po­lit­i­cal­ly charged state­ments that do not al­ways trans­late in­to ac­tion.

Of the 32-point agen­da items set out at the start of COP27 two weeks ago, as of last evening, nine had been agreed to, eight were yet to have a de­ci­sion on them, four­teen have had no out­come and the de­ci­sion on bunker fu­els has been post­poned.

Amongst a host of oth­er crit­i­cal is­sues, at the cen­tre of the dys­func­tion has been the strug­gle be­tween wealthy and de­vel­op­ing na­tions to find com­mon ground in de­vel­op­ing a Loss and Dam­age Fund.

Loss and Dam­age was added to the COP27 agen­da, be­com­ing a win for the Al­liance of Small Is­land States (AO­SIS), who have been push­ing this ef­fort for the last 30 years. How­ev­er, get­ting Loss and Dam­age on­to the agen­da was on­ly the first step.

Mul­ti­ple de­vel­oped coun­tries con­tin­ue to stonewall ef­forts to cre­ate the fund. The Unit­ed States has re­peat­ed­ly said it will not sup­port cre­at­ing a fund­ing fa­cil­i­ty and has held strong op­po­si­tion.

How­ev­er, in a sur­pris­ing re­ver­sal yes­ter­day morn­ing, Frans Tim­mer­mans, the vice pres­i­dent of the Eu­ro­pean Com­mis­sion, said, “We were re­luc­tant about a fund. It was not our idea. I know from ex­pe­ri­ence it takes time be­fore a fund can be es­tab­lished. But since they [de­vel­op­ing coun­tries] were so at­tached to it, we have agreed. This is our fi­nal of­fer.”

There are three op­tions on the ne­go­ti­at­ing ta­ble for cre­at­ing a Loss and Dam­age Fund – cre­ate a fund at COP27, wait a year to cre­ate the fund at COP28 or es­tab­lish “fund­ing arrange­ments” in 2023 to be op­er­a­tionalised at COP29 in 2024.

The G77 Plus Chi­na bloc, rep­re­sent­ing 134 na­tions, in­clud­ing Trinidad and To­ba­go, said the lat­ter two op­tions are not ten­able.

At a press con­fer­ence yes­ter­day, Sher­ry Rehman, the Fed­er­al Cli­mate Change Min­is­ter from Pak­istan and chair of G77 plus Chi­na, said, “We are com­mit­ted to keep­ing to op­tion 1 with changes that we have sub­mit­ted.”

At an­oth­er press con­fer­ence ear­li­er this week, speak­ing as chair of AO­SIS and the Min­is­ter of Health, Well­ness and the En­vi­ron­ment of An­tigua and Bar­bu­da, Mol­wyn Joseph, said, “We have the op­por­tu­ni­ty at this COP to plant the first seed of restora­tion for these coun­tries that are dev­as­tat­ed. That is the es­tab­lish­ment of the Loss and Dam­age fund.”

He con­tin­ued, “When you open the bank ac­count, you don’t have all the funds in it. You build it up. And that’s what I’m say­ing. Let us open a bank ac­count here in Egypt. Then, we iden­ti­fy the fi­nan­cial flows in­to this fund so that when the chil­dren of our pop­u­la­tions’ homes are blown apart, we have funds to re­store their homes.”

At an in­for­mal stock take press con­fer­ence yes­ter­day, COP27 pres­i­dent HE Sameh Shoukry said, “I re­main con­cerned at the num­ber of out­stand­ing is­sues, in­clud­ing on fi­nance mit­i­ga­tion, adap­ta­tion, loss and dam­age and their in­ter-link­ages. I call up­on par­ties to ur­gent­ly work to­geth­er to re­solve these out­stand­ing is­sues as swift­ly as pos­si­ble.”

This grid­lock has led to the con­fer­ence, slat­ed to end at 6 pm yes­ter­day (Egypt time), be­ing ex­tend­ed in­to to­day, with the new, ten­ta­tive end by late tonight in­to Sun­day morn­ing. How­ev­er, ac­cord­ing to Spe­cial Rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the COP27 pres­i­dent, Am­bas­sador Wael Aboul­magd, this de­lay is not a tes­ta­ment for or against a COP Pres­i­den­cy.

A a press con­fer­ence yes­ter­day, Aboul­magd said, “It is a very broad and com­plex process with many sov­er­eign states that don’t have a vot­ing cul­ture or mech­a­nism on sub­stan­tive is­sues. It’s sub­ject to so many cross­winds that might af­fect how things tran­spire. What mat­ters, re­al­ly, is to have mean­ing­ful out­comes.”

He added that he’d even take the con­fer­ence through Mon­day if it meant a mean­ing­ful out­come. Eight of the ten most re­cent COPs have been over­run by more than 24 hours, with on­ly six fin­ish­ing on the sched­uled day.

It is im­por­tant to note that the glob­al ac­tion seen at COP21 in 2015, which pro­duced the Paris Agree­ment, is an ex­cep­tion, not the norm. COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, has turned in­to Copen­hagen 2.0—where talks col­lapsed in 2009 at COP15. Many diplo­mats and ne­go­tia­tors have ex­pressed anger at the lev­el of dys­func­tion of the con­fer­ence over the past two weeks. One diplo­mat, who re­quest­ed to re­main anony­mous due to the na­ture of the re­marks, said to a press pool, “It’s a s---show, but it’s the on­ly s---show in town.”

This sto­ry was pro­duced as part of the 2022 Cli­mate Change Me­dia Part­ner­ship, a jour­nal­ism fel­low­ship or­gan­ised by In­ternews’ Earth Jour­nal­ism Net­work and the Stan­ley Cen­tre for Peace and Se­cu­ri­ty.

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