Paris must not be the beginning of the end
Date: 19 October 2015Bonn, 19 October 2015: Developed and wealthy nations must allow their policies to reflect the magnitude and urgency of action needed to tackle climate change, thus allowing a serious boost in ambition in this last round of climate negotiations before December Paris UN talks, say the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) Group.
An encouraging number of Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) – the country plans to tackle climate change – have been submitted, 123 in total, which includes the EU bloc.
However there are fears that the current INDCs are unfortunately still a race to the bottom. The level of ambition contained within the country climate change plans put the world on a 2.7°C pathway but the LDCs are calling for a 1.5°C world, as anything higher exposes our nations to irreversible changes in the climate system.
While participation is at an unprecedented level, the LDCs also have grave concerns that too much emphasis is still on the process and communication of the INDCs, rather than the actual implementation of the plans.
The Chair of the 48-member LDC Group at the negotiations, Mr. Giza Gaspar-Martins of Angola said: “There are five negotiating days until Paris and now is the time to push for real action. It is not enough to only ask a commitment to the process, countries must sign up to a legal agreement of implementation and results that benefit us all.”
The finance language in the draft agreement is the greatest area of concern, as the commitments required by developed and donor countries are not made clear, with a call for scaling up mobilisation of finance, rather than the finance itself.
There is also no mention of the Least Developed Country Fund (LDCF), the only fund dedicated to LDCs and currently standing empty despite there being approximately 230 projects in the pipeline. This does not inspire confidence.
Coupled with the lack of mitigation ambition within the INDCs, the precarious climate finance flows seem to place an unreasonable and unachievable adaptation burden on the LDCs.
Further areas of concern for the Group include:
- The country commitments must have a legal basis, such as the Kyoto Protocol
- The agreement must deliver both a high level of participation and effectiveness
- The process must be more transparent than it currently is, so progress can be measured
- There needs to be a higher emphasis on mitigation, especially among the wealthier nations
- The G77 and China’s position on Loss and Damage is not reflected in the statement
So far 35 out of 48 LDCs have submitted INDCs and more are coming. However, there is no mention in the co-chairs’ tool of how developed countries and others will support LDCs in the implementation of these INDCs. This must also be made clearer.
Giza added: “We are already facing devastating climate impacts, for example sea level rise and food insecurity are very real and present dangers. If the negotiations don’t work for the most vulnerable among us – the Least Developed Countries – then they will have failed.”
It is hoped that officials will leave Bonn with almost final text to be agreed in December.
Ambassador Collin Beck of Solomon Islands said: “I hear many of our partners saying, ‘Paris is not the end, it’s the beginning’. But for many of us, if we don’t get the agreement right, Paris will be the beginning of the end.
“The science is clear that we need to limit temperature increase to below 1.5 degrees, and that for us, it’s a matter of survival. We refuse to be the sacrificial lambs of the process.”
For further comment please contact: ldcchairangola@gmail.com
Filed under: 2015, Giza Gaspar Martins, INDCs, News, Paris Agreement, Press Release