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1 november 2001
is the protocol loosing its teeth?
Negotiations have finally started in earnest
in Marrakech, with governments locked in
contact groups to agree on the outstanding
technical and legal aspects of the Bonn
accord. These technical agreements will be
forwarded as draft Decisions to ministers as
they arrive next Wednesday. The only Kyoto
Protocol issue that was not discussed in Bonn
and is therefore the subject of fresh
negotiations is that of rules under Articles
5, 7 & 8, which deal with emissions
inventories, monitoring and verification.
On compliance, Japan, Australia, Canada
and Russia (part of the Umbrella Group of
countries) have put forward a proposal to
weaken the agreement that governments signed
up to in Bonn. Under the Bonn agreement,
governments declared that the Kyoto Protocol
would include consequences for non-compliance
of a mandatory nature. This means that if a
country failed to meet its targets, mandatory
consequences would automatically follow.
These consequences would include a penalty
of 1.3 tonnes of carbon for every tonne by
which the country overshot its target and
suspension of the non-compliant country's
eligibility to participate in the mechanisms
(emissions trading and projects under Clean
Development Mechanism and Joint
Implementation). Under the Kyoto Protocol,
legally binding consequences can only be
imposed with an amendment to the treaty, and
an amendment can only be adopted once the
treaty has entered into force.
The Bonn deal set out what the amendment
would include but Japan, Australia, Canada
and Russia are now requesting that the nature
of the compliance regime should not be
prejudged in any way. Japan, Russia and
Australia have also been trying to limit the
ability of any country to trigger
investigations into the compliance status of
any other country, instead preferring to rely
on the slow machinations of the compliance
system itself.
These attacks amount to a clear erosion of
political will, demonstrated by ministers in
Bonn, to prescribe a robust enforcement
regime. The Russian delegation is being
particularly destructive, threatening not to
ratify if it doesn't get its way. Hopefully
the arrival of high level officials will set
the record straight. Fortunately, other
Umbrella Group members like Norway and New
Zealand are distancing themselves from their
former allies. Today, governments are in
closed session discussing the compliance
text.
It was recognized in Bonn that the
decision to include reforestation and
afforestation in the Clean Development
Mechanism might lead to disastrous impacts as
it could encourage the replacement of natural
forests and other natural ecosystems by
monoculture tree plantations. For that
reason, the SBSTA was asked to develop
definitions and modalities to address a range
of problems associated with such projects
before COP9 in 2003. However, the negotiators
at Marrakech seem to be hesitant to start up
the work in this respect, and it is feared
that they will only decide on the Terms of
Reference for this work in June 2002, which
leaves them a little more than a year to deal
with all this work. A related question is
whether there will be a so-called prompt
start for sinks projects, which implies that
these projects, like other CDM projects, can
already be set up even though it is not yet
certain which modalities and definitions
would apply to them. FoEI feels that this
would lead to an awkward situation as such
precedents might negatively influence SBSTA
decision-making. It should be clarified in
Marrakech that sinks projects can only start
after the modalities and definitions for such
projects have been set. At this moment, it is
not even clear for example what a "forest"
is: according to some any collection of trees
would already qualify as a forest.
Meanwhile, despite having rejected the
Kyoto Protocol the US seems to be running
ahead with its own carbon sinks projects, not
bothering about any rules, modalities or
definitions that might be established for
them. In a brochure, a Brazilian NGO even
announced its reforestation projects as
"supported by the Clean Development
Mechanism", which is a remarkable statement
as the projects were financed by General
Motors and Texaco, two US companies.
Provisions for public participation and
transparency throughout the COP7 negotiating
texts remain weak. Under the Clean
Development Mechanism and Joint
Implementation, only rules that fall short of
current international standards are being
discussed. Under compliance Russia has even
suggested that compliance decisions should
only be revealed to the public once the
enforcement branch has finished its
deliberations. While other Umbrella Group
countries have not stated their agreement
with Russia, Japan has repeatedly appealed to
other governments to take Russia's concerns
seriously.
Tomorrow, governments will discuss the
input of the climate process to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development to be held
in Johannesburg next September. The World
Summit has been scheduled ten years after the
Rio summit at which the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change was signed.
So far, governments have shown little
interest in adopting a bold initiative on
climate. For the fourth year in a row, the
issue of the overall adequacy of the Kyoto
Protocol (in relation to the Convention
objective of preventing dangerous climate
change) has been dropped from the agenda. The
developing country bloc, G77 and China, is
concerned that any discussion of adequacy
will allow rich nations to demand that poorer
countries take on emissions reductions before
committing to significant reductions
themselves. This is especially true of the US
and Australia who have repeatedly stated that
they will not even ratify the Protocol until
developing countries take on targets.
Meanwhile, other rich countries wish to avoid
an assessment of their lack of action to
date. This conspiracy of silence must be
broken if real progress is to be made,
starting with a commitment from rich
countries to much deeper cuts.
Commenting, Friends of the Earth
International Climate Campaigner Kate Hampton
said:
"So far, Russia, Japan and Australia have
been using the Marrakech talks to wriggle
through ever larger loopholes in the Kyoto
Protocol. This is not what the watching world
expects. Kyoto was only a first step to
preventing dangerous climate change.
Governments need to go further and faster,
not sit around squabbling about the details
and hunting for ways to evade their
responsibilities. European and developing
countries must continue to stand firm against
the attempts of this influential minority to
undermine the Kyoto Protocol from within"
Contact:
Kate Hampton (FOEI International Climate
Coordinator in Marrakech 26th October -11th
November) +44 774 896 7323
Helen Burley (press officer) + 44 7778
356888
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