Media Briefing
23 October - 1 November 2002
Please note that FoEI representatives from
several countries will be available in New
Delhi for comment and analysis on the
progress of the talks. A separate contact
list is available.
Press Officer - Alex Phillips on +91 98102
74093
Lead Spokesperson - Kate Hampton on +91
98180 96658
UN CLIMATE TALKS IN DELHI (COP8)
Climate disasters around the world, such
as the recent floods in Europe and China and
droughts in US and India, should be
concentrating Government minds on the urgent
need to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
Instead, emissions continue to rise, even in
countries that have already agreed to
emissions targets under the Kyoto climate
treaty.
From Wednesday 23 October until Friday 1
November, Governments will be meeting in New
Delhi, India, for the 8th Conference of the
Parties to UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change (COP8). The purpose of this round of
UN climate talks is to continue developing
international rules under which the UN
Convention and the Kyoto Protocol can be
implemented. The Kyoto treaty is the only
international treaty aimed at reducing the
emissions of greenhouse gases but it has not
yet become international law.
The Indian Government is seeking to
prioritise the implementation of existing
agreements, and policies that address climate
change and sustainable development together.
An emphasis on 'adaptation' measures to
reduce the vulnerability of developing
countries to climate change (where most of
the impacts will be felt) and technology
transfer can be expected.
UPDATE ON THE KYOTO PROTOCOL
The Kyoto Protocol was agreed in 1997. But
negotiations to design rules for its
implementation still continue. Most of the
rules were agreed at climate talks in Bonn
and Marrakech in 2001, when the international
community decided to move ahead without the
United States, which has reneged on Kyoto
under the Bush administration. While domestic
pressure on the Bush administration is
mounting as a growing number of states and
local authorities adopt climate policies, the
US continues to undermine multilateral action
globally. At the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg, a US-OPEC
coalition forced the abandonment of a
proposed global renewable energy target.
The Kyoto Protocol requires that 55
countries plus countries representing 55% of
industrialised country emissions ratify the
treaty (i.e. pass it into domestic law)
before it can enter into force as an
international agreement.
Without the US, Russia is the country upon
which Kyoto's entry into force depends.
During the WSSD, Russian Prime Minister
Mikhail Kasyanov stated that Russia intends
to ratify "in the very near future". It is
now expected that Russia will complete the
process in the first half of 2003.
During the WSSD, Canadian Prime Minister
Jean Chretien also announced his Government's
intention to put the Kyoto Protocol before
parliament for ratification, despite ongoing
opposition from the Canadian energy industry
and energy producing provinces. This
opposition has led the Canadian government to
continue seeking last minute concessions in
the form of a loophole that would enable
Canada to claim credit for exporting energy
to the US. So far, other countries have
resisted these demands. Canada is not
essential to entry into force but is a major
energy consumer and producer.
Australia is the only industrialised
country which, like the US, has stated that
it will not ratify. The EU and Japan have
already ratified the treaty, along with most
Central and Eastern European countries,
including Poland and Hungary, and many
developing countries including Brazil, China
and India.
HOW MUCH FURTHER DO WE HAVE TO GO?
Despite years of negotiations, the Kyoto
Protocol is only a first step in the fight
against climate change and has been watered
down at the behest of the 'Umbrella Group' of
countries, including the US, Canada,
Australia, Japan and Russia. Kyoto will
merely stabilise, or reduce by a few
percentage points against 1990 levels, the
average emissions of those industrialised
countries that participate. In order to
prevent severe global warming damage,
industrialised countries will have to cut
their emissions by about 80% by 2050 against
1990 levels. Developing countries will also
have to make a transition to cleaner energy,
transport and modes of production in the
coming decades in order to avert climate
disaster.
Many countries are beginning to look
beyond the first commitment period of the
Kyoto Protocol. For instance, according to an
ENDS Daily report on the German SDP-Green
coalition agreement this week, "Germany will
push for the EU to go beyond its current
Kyoto protocol commitment to cut greenhouse
gases to agree a target reduction of 30% from
1990 levels by 2020. In this context, Germany
should reduce its own emissions by 40%, the
parties have agreed."
However, in the absence of tough action to
cut emissions so far, developing countries
are increasingly focusing on the need for
funds to protect themselves against the
damage that is already occurring and against
future projected impacts. Moreover, with the
world's biggest polluter, the US, still
firmly out of the picture, many governments,
both North and South, are unwilling to take
further action. But not all impacts can be
'adapted' to and many ecosystems face
collapse, even at low levels of warming.
Emissions reductions cannot be avoided.
WHAT'S UP AT COP8?
The key issues on the agenda at COP 8 are
outlined below:
Funding for developing countries
At the climate talks in Bonn, the EU,
Canada, Iceland, New Zealand, Norway and
Switzerland agreed collectively to contribute
$410 million annually by 2005, either through
bilateral or multilateral channels, to fund
adaptation, technology transfer and capacity
building for all developing countries, and
economic diversification for fossil fuel
exporting developing countries. The Marrakech
accords called for establishment of an
Adaptation Fund and a Special Climate Change
Fund to address these issues, and a Least
Developed Countries Fund to assist the
world's poorest nations in developing
National Adaptation Programmes of Action
(NAPAs). The Adaptation Fund will be funded
by a levy on projects under the Clean
Development Mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol,
plus voluntary contributions. Contributions
to the other funds are entirely voluntary, as
is the replenishment of the Global
Environment Facility (GEF) that was
established at the first Earth Summit in Rio
in 1992. COP8 is expected to make
arrangements for the establishment of the new
funds and provide guidance on how the money
should be spent.
Friends of the Earth International
believes that:
-
Adaptation is essential to help
communities around the world reduce their
vulnerability to climate impacts and more
emphasis needs to be placed on community
level disaster mitigation and
preparedness.
-
Without clean technology transfer,
developing countries will continue to be
locked into a path of fossil fuel based
development; without a transition to clean
energy in developing countries, dangerous
levels of global warming will be
unavoidable. Technology transfer needs to
be driven by and adapted to local needs,
and supported by adequate information
sharing and capacity building.
-
Funding must be predictable and
provided in sufficient amounts according
to the 'polluter pays' principle.
However, the US has so far failed to
commit any funds, despite having ratified
the Framework Convention, and the
commitment by the EU and other countries
is wholly inadequate when compared with
the task at hand
.
Review of adequacy
The Framework Convention requires that
Governments regularly review the adequacy of
action being taken to address climate change.
However, this item has been knocked off the
negotiations table as Governments refuse to
discuss it. Developing countries do not want
to open the issue of new commitments because
they fear that they will have to take on
targets, and industrialised countries that
have shown little progress in addressing
climate change are fearful that they will
also be open to attack. G77, the developing
country negotiating bloc wishes to amend this
agenda item to provide for a review of the
adequacy of implementation of existing
commitments, not the commitments themselves.
Whether this position will change before the
Kyoto Protocol enters into force and
industrialised countries have made progress
on their commitments remains to be seen.
Under the Convention and the Protocol,
industrialised are supposed to lead in
reducing their emissions because the
overriding priority for developing countries
is poverty alleviation.
Friends of the Earth International
believes that:
o Until the United States and other
rich nations make significant emissions
reductions and provide sufficient funding for
a clean transition in the South, this
deadlock will continue, with disastrous
consequences for climate vulnerable
communities around the world.
-
A review of adequacy is urgently
needed to set the stage for the next round
of emissions reduction negotiations
(planned for 2005). Governments must
establish a process through which this
review can take place.
-
The principle of equity must be
central to any review of adequacy, with a
focus on reducing disparities in per capita
emissions globally and the provision of
clean and affordable energy services to the
poor.
The integration of science and
policy
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) published its Third Assessment
Report (TAR) last year. The purpose of the
report is to present the current state of
climate science and socio-economic analysis
so that policy makers can make informed
decisions during the negotiations. At climate
talks this summer in Bonn, Governments agreed
to three new agenda items in order to
continue discussions on the interaction
between science and policy:
1 Research and systematic observation,
2 Impacts of, vulnerability and adaptation
to climate change, and
3 Mitigation.
While some Governments believe that the
TAR provided sufficient data to inform the
climate negotiations, obstructive Governments
continue to focus on the remaining
uncertainties in climate science.
Friends of the Earth International
believes that:
-
Climate science is sufficiently
robust to warrant urgent and drastic
emissions reductions - the investigation of
uncertainties must not derail the
acceleration of negotiations to agree new
targets.
-
Science should be integrated into
every aspect of decision making at the
negotiations, even though many of the
choices facing policy makers are ultimately
political ones.
-
A new fourth area of discussion is
necessary to consider the implications of
different levels of greenhouse gas
stabilisation in the atmosphere for both
impacts and emissions reductions.
The Clean Development Mechanism
(CDM)
At COP8, Governments will consider the
first report of the Executive Board that
oversees the CDM and will agree rules for the
crediting of forestry projects in developing
countries. The CDM was established to support
climate-friendly sustainable development in
developing countries, while awarding credits
that industrialised countries could count
against their domestic emissions targets. In
its first year of activity, the Board has
designed an accreditation procedure and
Project Design Document for developers and
simplified procedures for small projects.
In September, according to CDM Watch, 25
projects were going through the validation
process. While half were renewable energy
projects, they only accounted for 20% of the
credits, so-called Certified Emissions
Reductions or CERs. This is because more CERs
will be generated by environmentally damaging
large dam and plantation projects. The volume
of CERs generated by a project is calculated
according to a hypothetical baseline of
business-as-usual, against which the CDM
project is supposed to reduce emissions. Many
of proposed projects being proposed are not
'additional', i.e. they would have occurred
without the extra money generated by the sale
of CERs. This is contrary to the rules that
established the CDM and means that the
project sponsors aren't actually reducing
their emissions.
Friends of the Earth International
believes that:
-
Funding for plantation projects and
large dams under the CDM is unacceptable
because of their negative social and
environmental impacts. The CDM should
provide money for renewables and energy
efficiency.
-
Governments should not use the CDM
as a way of avoiding domestic emissions
reductions.
Public outreach
Under the Convention, Governments are
required to raise public awareness and ensure
public participation regarding climate
change. However, little progress is being
made either in industrialised countries or in
developing countries. There is no concerted
effort at international level to disseminate
scientific knowledge about global warming and
to enhance public participation in the
implementation of Kyoto mechanisms, policy
design and national reporting has been kept
at a minimum.
Friends of the Earth International
believes that:
-
Low awareness hinders public
participation and Governments' failure to
disseminate scientific knowledge regarding
climate change is unacceptable
-
COP8 must provide new impetus for
public education, and governments must work
with and in support of civil society to
increase public awareness regarding global
warming's causes, impacts and
solutions.
The Ministerial Segment
The Indian Government has designed a
process for the ministerial segment of the
conference (30 October to 1 November)
composed of three 'informal' roundtable
discussions:
1 'Taking Stock' of national and
international implementation,
2 'Climate Change and Sustainable
Development' linkages, and
3 'Wrap-up: Framework of Action for
Implementation'.
Friends of the Earth International
believes that:
-
The Indian government has identified
several important areas of work and
international pressure to implement
existing agreements must be maintained.
-
However, the annual UN climate talks
must make urgent progress in addressing
climate change so new decisions must be
taken to address both adaptation and
mitigation needs and increase the pace of
negotiations.
ENDS
Contact
Details
Alex Phillips Press Officer +91 98102
74093
Kate Hampton Lead Spokesperson +91 98180
96658
A complete contact list of all Friends of
the Earth representatives is available on
request - these include representatives from
Japan, South Africa, Ghana, United Kingdom,
Finland, Brazil, Norway, Australia, Argentina
and Ireland. We are able to provide
interviews in English, Spanish, French,
Portuguese, Japanese, Norwegian and
Finnish.
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