COP27 | U.N. Climate Talks Poised for Deal Creating ‘Loss and Damage’ Fund

COP27 aims to accelerate action towards limiting global warming to 1.5°C.

COP27 | U.N. Climate Talks Poised for Deal Creating ‘Loss and Damage’ Fund

What’s in today’s article:

  • Key points of the draft decision
  • Draft decision’s mitigating clause and India’s influence on it
  • Loss and damage points in the draft decision
  • Concerns

 

Why In News:

  • The draft decision text of the COP27 of the UN climate negotiations, which was just revealed, included both of India’s important points in the mitigation clause.
  • In addition, the draft agreement seemed to be on track to meet a crucial demand of developing countries by creating a new fund for loss and damage.

 

Key points of the draft decision:

  • No fossil fuel phase down is listed in the text
  • Keep 1.5-degree Celsius goal alive
  • Require a transformation of the financial system
  • Urges counties to “significantly scale” adaptation finance.
    • Since it misses the call to double financing, it’s weaker than Glasgow pact (COP26).
  • Requests countries who haven’t done so to update and strengthen their climate plans before COP28
  • Welcomes the new UN net zero rules for corporations to stop greenwashing.
    • Greenwashing is the practice of making false claims in order to mislead consumers into believing that a company’s products are more environmentally friendly or have a higher positive environmental impact than they actually do.

 

Draft decision’s mitigating clause and India’s influence on it:

  • Mitigation clause: It now calls upon countries to –
    • Accelerate the development, deployment and dissemination of technologies.
    • Adopt policies to transition towards low-emission energy systems.
    • Rapidly scale up the deployment of clean power generation and energy efficiency measures.
    • Accelerate efforts towards the phase-down of unabated coal power.
    • Phase-out of inefficient fossil fuel subsidies, while providing targeted support to the poorest and most vulnerable, recognizing the need for support towards a just transition.
  • Two important insertions suggested by India:
  1. Phase-down” of unabated coal power.
  2. The conditionality of the fossil fuel subsidies which relates to “offering targeted assistance to the poorest and most vulnerable.”
    • Initial draft used “phase-out” (instead of phase-down) for coal and missed the targeted support point, resulting in facing objections from India.
    • India had got both these points inserted in the Glasgow Climate Pact (COP26) last year. These two will now continue to be in the final decision of the COP27.
    • The draft decision text will now be discussed in the plenary for final decision (outcome of the COP27) with consensus, involving 195 countries.

 

Loss and damage (L&D) points in the draft decision:

  • The text addresses the basic demand – a fund as well as new ‘funding arrangements’.
  • It seeks to link L&D with 1.5-degree Celsius warming limit (an indirect reference to mitigation).
  • The main body of the text begins with acknowledging assistance needed for “particularly vulnerable” developing countries but the decision on funding makes a more general reference to ‘developing countries’.
  • There are multiple references to the use of existing funds.
  • Seeks to expand sources of funding, including “innovative sources”.
  • Pushes for financial reform discussions at International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (WB) next year.

 

Concerns:

  • No funds have been pledged for the fund. Climate disaster-affected developing countries are still a long way from being able to obtain financial resources to reconstruct.
  • The exact definitions of terms such as “particularly vulnerable”, “most vulnerable” are potential points of disagreement which have been left to be resolved at a later stage.
  • Additional burden being put on the developing countries. One of the contentions is to ask each country to revise its climate action plans, formally known as nationally-determined contributions (NDCs), with progressively stronger actions every year.
  • Developed countries have failed to deliver on their promise to mobilise a relatively small sum of USD 100 billion each year. The draft text just “urges” developed countries to reach this aim and makes no mention of a timeline.
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