Yahoo – AFP,
Mariette le Roux and Marlowe Hood, November 18, 2017
Bonn (AFP) -
Negotiations to bolster the climate-saving Paris Agreement, crafted over two
decades, closed in Bonn Saturday, deflated but not derailed by Donald Trump's
rejection of the treaty and defence of fossil fuels.
The US
President's decision to yank the United States from the hard-fought global pact
cast a long shadow over the talks, which ran deep into overtime. Negotiations
were marked by revived divisions between developing countries and rich ones.
With a wary
eye on America, which sent negotiators to a forum it intends to quit, envoys
from nearly 200 countries got on with the business of designing a "rule
book" for enacting the agreement, which enters into full force in three
years' time.
"The
Trump administration failed to stop the global climate talks from moving
forward," said Greenpeace observer Jens Mattias Clausen.
Closing two
weeks of talks, negotiators agreed in the early hours of Saturday to hold a
stocktake in 2018 of national efforts to cut fossil fuel emissions.
The Paris
treaty calls for limiting average global warming to "well under" two
degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) compared to pre-industrial levels, or
1.5 C if possible.
Anything
over 2 C, experts say, dooms the world to calamitous climate change, with more
extreme superstorms, droughts, floods, and land-gobbling sea level rise.
A report
this week warned that emissions of carbon dioxide, the main planet-warming gas,
were set to rise by two percent in 2017 after three years of hardly any growth.
"Starting
now, emissions need to decrease to zero over the next 40 years to prevent us
breaching the 1.5 C threshold," Piers Forster, a professor of climate
change at the University of Leeds, said.
Nations
have submitted voluntary emissions-cutting commitments under the Paris pact
championed by Trump's predecessor Barack Obama.
But
scientists say current pledges place the world on course for warming of 3 C or
more, and counsel an urgent upgrade of the global commitment to phasing out
greenhouse gases produced by burning coal, oil and natural gas.
Islands
in peril
"While
the Paris Agreement represents a remarkable diplomatic achievement, it will be
judged by history as little more than words on paper if the world fails to take
the level of action needed to prevent the loss of entire island nations,"
Maldives environment minister Thoriq Ibrahim told delegates Friday.
The
stocktake agreed Saturday must quantify the shortfall to determine what more
needs to be done.
In Bonn,
negotiators also worked on a nuts-and-bolts rulebook, to be finalised at the
next UN climate conference in Katowice, Poland in December 2018, for putting
the Paris Agreement into action.
Some
progress was made, but observers and delegates complained that things were
moving too slowly.
Many
lamented the void in "political leadership" left by the departure of
Obama, and by German Chancellor Angela Merkel's failure to set a timetable for
phasing out coal-fired power plants, which produce 40 percent of Germany's
electricity.
The talks
saw rich and poor nations butt heads on several issues -- mainly money.
Developing
countries demand detailed progress reports on rich nations' promise to boost
climate finance to $100 billion (85 billion euros) per year by 2020.
The world's
poorer nations -- often the first to feel the sting of climate change impacts
-- need cash to make the costly shift away from atmosphere-fouling coal, and to
shore up their defences against extreme weather.
Donor
nations, in turn, insists that emissions cuts by developing countries be
subject to verification.
Act, soon
The United
States, which under Trump has slashed funding for climate bodies and projects,
took a tough stance in the finance negotiations in Bonn, a position that
angered some delegates.
Adding to
the tension, White House officials and energy company executives hosted an
event on the conference margins to defend the use of fossil fuels.
On
Thursday, 20 governments from both wealthy and developing nations, led by
Britain and Canada, countered with the launch of a coal phase-out initiative.
The United
States is the world's biggest historical greenhouse gas polluter, second only
to China.
"In a
year marked by extreme weather disasters and potentially the first increase in
carbon emissions in four years, the paradox between what we are doing and need
to be delivering is clear," WWF climate head Manuel Pulgar-Vidal said of
the talks.
"Countries
must act with greater climate ambition, and soon."
Observers
hope that the "One Planet Summit" hosted by French President Emmanuel
Macron in Paris on December 12 will boost momentum.
Macron has
invited some 100 heads of state and government, but not Trump, as well as
business leaders, to discuss finance for climate projects.
UN climate envoys agree on way forward, despite Trump's rejection of Paris Agreement.— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 18, 2017
Smoke pours from a Statue of Liberty replica by Danish artist Jens Galschiot at a park in Bonn during the COP23 UN Climate Change Conference.https://t.co/OSunK82ZSC pic.twitter.com/wVclxFe5a0
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