A Paris summit next year will face a tougher task to agree on a UN deal to slow climate change after the hopes of many that cooperation between Washington and Beijing would be a magic key to end global gridlock dissolved in chaotic preparatory talks in Lima, Peru.
At best, Paris may be a chance to reform a sprawling system of annual UN talks — more than 11,000 delegates attended the two-week talks in a tent city in Lima — and find ways to boost long-term action to stem rising greenhouse gas emissions.
After a frantic conclusion two days into overtime on Sunday, about 190 governments agreed only to some modest building blocks of a Paris accord despite high expectations for a positive outcome after China and the US — the world’s top two emitters — last month agreed jointly to limit emissions.
Photo: Reuters
However, the political momentum of the deal gave way to the familiar divisions and “red lines” that routinely bog down talks, especially on the question of how to differentiate the responsibilities of rich and poor countries.
“The US-China announcement hinted at a fundamental shift putting developed and developing countries on a more equal footing. It’s no surprise that in Lima a lot of developing countries pushed back,” said Elliot Diringer, of the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions.
The UN says it is already clear that promises for emissions curbs at a Paris summit in December next year will be too weak to get on track for a UN goal of limiting global warming to 2oC above pre-industrial times.
“We will have a lot of work to do,” French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said of the task ahead for Paris.
Still, next year holds out a hope of reform for the UN system to rein in greenhouse gases blamed for causing heat waves, floods, droughts and rising sea levels.
Paris could mark a shift away from two decades of climate diplomacy toward a more technocratic system that would allow national pledges for action to limit warming to be compared and toughened in coming years.
Former UN climate chief Yvo de Boer said one problem was that UN negotiators lacked authority.
“If the leaders of the Group of 20 got together and said ‘let’s get this done’ the whole thing would be over in 30 minutes,” he told reporters.
De Boer, who heads the Global Green Growth Institute — which helps developing nations — said that annual climate talks have ballooned since 1,000 delegates attended a first meeting in 1994.
“Paris could be an opportunity to change that, if it identifies the cornerstones of the work that needs to be done. It could make it into a technical process and not a political process,” he said.
So far, however, the signs even of that are not good.
Texts agreed to in Lima will oblige governments to provide only vague plans for limiting greenhouse gas emissions — the cornerstone of a Paris deal — after China objected to an EU drive for detailed accounts.
The outcome of the Lima talks, which attracted delegates ranging from OPEC oil ministers to vegans dressed as chickens, means that a Paris deal is likely to be a mere patchwork of national offers for curbing emissions.
Adding pressure, this year is set to be the warmest, or among the very hottest, on record, according to the UN weather agency.
Several long-time UN climate talk observers said the weak outcome from Lima proves that the UN multilateral process is not the best for climate action. Businesses and cities are among those taking action.
“While negotiators had difficulty in reaching agreement in Lima even on a modest set of outcomes, the UN is no longer the only show in town,” said Nathaniel Keohane, of the Environmental Defense Fund.
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