Durban Climate Talks Ending: Polluters Won, People Lost
Durban – 11 December 2011 - On the closing of the latest round of UN climate talks in Durban Greenpeace today declared that it was clear that our Governments this past two weeks listened to the carbon-intensive polluting corporations instead of listening to the people who want an end to our dependence on fossil fuels and real and immediate action on climate change.
“The grim news is that the blockers lead by the US have succeeded in inserting a vital get-out clause that could easily prevent the next big climate deal being legally binding. If that loophole is exploited it could be a disaster. And the deal is due to be implemented 'from 2020' leaving almost no room for increasing the depth of carbon cuts in this decade when scientists say we need emissions to peak," said Kumi Naidoo, Greenpeace International Executive Director.
“Right now the global climate regime amounts to nothing more than a voluntary deal that’s put off for a decade This could take us over the two degree threshold where we pass from danger to potential catastrophe.”
"Our atmosphere has been loaded with a carbon debt and the bill, carrying a Durban postmark, has been posted to the world’s poorest countries. The chance of averting catastrophic climate change is slipping through our hands with every passing year that nations fail to agree on a rescue plan for the planet."
Background Brief
For these talks
to have been deemed a success governments in Durban needed
to:
• Ensure a peak in global greenhouse gas
emissions by 2015 -
Coming out of Cancun last year
governments were to agree here to 2015 targets for global
emissions reduction and global peak year for emissions and
they have done neither.
Governments did promise to
develop a workplan to close the gap between the science and
the government pledges to reduce emissions. However the lack
of ambition is not caused by lack of plans, but rather a
lack of political will.
• Ensure that the
Kyoto Protocol continues and provide a mandate for a
comprehensive legally binding instrument
-
Governments did decide that there will be another
timeframe where governments sign up to deal with emissions
under the Kyoto protocol but postponed putting it into
action until next year. On the issue of a new legally
binding agreement the proposal was watered down
substantially to the point where governments have only
committed to talking and producing more documents – not
actually committing to a new legally binding protocol.
India´s role in the negotiations around the new legally
binding agreement was unconstructive and lacked foresight
while both the island states and the least developed
countries pushed hard for the urgent adoption of a new and
ambitious protocol.
In Durban, Parties agreed to adopt a second commitment period as well as launch negotiations on a new protocol under the Convention to include all Parties. With the survival of nations on the line, only the strongest terms – legal terms – are acceptable. Where governments failed was on the timeline. The amendment to the Protocol will only be adopted at COP18 (2012) in Qatar, while the new Protocol is to be adopted no later than 2015, but only be implemented from 2020.
• Deliver the necessary finance to tackle climate
change –
Governments in Durban spent an inordinate
amount of time talking about technical details of the Green
Climate Fund. What was needed was not only an agreement on
the fund but more importantly how this empty fund could be
filled. The goal for developed countries is 100 billion USD
per year by 2020. So not only do we face a gap between what
the science says is needed and what these governments are
prepared to do to avoid catastrophic climate change, we also
face a massive gap in finance required and what is
available, to mitigate and adapt to climate change.
• Set up a framework for protecting forests in
developing countries -
Rather than providing
necessary guidance and security to civil society, donors,
and investors, on how best to meet the Cancun Agreement on
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation
(REDD) to “slow, halt and reverse” deforestation in a
socially responsible way, the decisions adopted in Durban
have increased the environmental and social risks associated
with the Cancun objective. Rather than protecting the
rights of the people responsible for protecting the forest,
the decision opens the doors for the irresponsible companies
who profit from forest destruction. An entire year’s worth
of negotiations has been wasted.
•
Ensure international transparency in assessing and
monitoring country commitments and actions
This
should be about governments being open about how they are
implementing the agreed rules for action, but in Durban
there has been no agreement on how this action will be
reported on, by whom or by when.
Also for this to work, there has to be global agreement on how to measure action but the US refuses to accept that oranges should be compared with oranges.
One bright moment came from China’s participation in Durban. Given where China came in - which was not buying into this process at all - they have shifted their position to allow movement on reporting of how they’re implementation of this convention is proceeding. This while the US has gone nowhere.
In
addition:
On the decision to include carbon capture
and storage (CCS) in the Clean Development Mechanism
(CDM) -
CCS on coal has never been shown to work on a
large scale, but UN approval increases the risk that new
coal power plants will be built, with a dangerous CO2 legacy
left for future generations. It is illogical that this
technology could now get financing under the Clean
Development Mechanism of an agreement that should be saving
the climate.
ENDS