The new global climate deal is expected to be agreed upon at
the Conference of Parties (COP21) in Paris, from Nov 30-Dec 12 (with the
possibility of an extension, depending on the state of the negotiations).
ActionAid’s Climate Policy Manager, Harjeet Singh, said the
events in Bonn “have shown there is still a mountain to climb before a deal
emerges on the horizon at the Paris summit in December. It seems that the
European Union (EU) forgot its claim of standing together with the world’s poor
and vulnerable”, he said. Singh said: “On finance, rich countries know they’ve
failed to meet their climate finance obligations. They refuse to admit it or
make a good-faith attempt to fix it, instead of proffering loans and double-counting
development aid as climate finance.” In short, he pointed out, developed
nations talk big on a long term solution but are still dreaming of a
destination without knowing how they will make the journey. “Rich countries
also continued with their ill-rehearsed Houdini act, coming up with ‘false
solutions’. The current proposal of setting a long-term goal to cut carbon
through ‘net-zero’ would mean developed nations can continue to live life as
normal while the poor are kicked off their land in an attempt to absorb
emissions,” he added.
Chee Yoke Ling, Director of Third World Network, said
without a fair deal in Paris there will be a temperature increase of more than
2 degrees Celsius and a perpetuation of injustice against developing countries
and their peoples. “The week started with a very unbalanced text prepared by
the co-chairs that favored the United States and its allies. United efforts by
developing countries continue to meet with resistance as major developed
countries persist in chipping away at their commitments and the equity basis of
the Convention,” she said.
Lidy Nacpil, Coordinator of the Asian Peoples’ Movement on
Debt and Development, referred to the “Fair Shares” civil society review of
national climate pledges, which shows that the ambition of wealthy developed
countries falls well short of their fair share, while developing countries have
made pledges that exceed or broadly meet their fair shares. “All countries need
to do their fair share, but the study clearly shows that the onus is on developed
countries to drastically cut their emissions and provide finance to developing
countries,” Nacpil said.
Oxfam said “the combined total of pledges still represents
an unacceptable gamble that puts at risk the world’s climate security.”
Susann Scherbarth, climate justice and energy campaigner at
Friends of the Earth Europe said,
“The deplorable inaction at the climate negotiations is a
calamity for people across the world. We are facing a planetary emergency with
floods, storms, droughts and rising seas causing devastation. The risk of
irreversible climate change draws ever closer, and hundreds of thousands of
people have already paid with their lives,” said Dipti Bhatnagar, Friends of
the Earth International's climate justice and energy coordinator. “We are
seeking a just and ambitious deal in Paris, but with the talks held hostage by
rich country governments dodging their responsibilities and blaming developing
nations, and by corporations promoting dirty energy and false solutions it’s
difficult to imagine that happening now. We need to keep building a movement of
people that can challenge governments and champion the real solutions to the
climate crisis.”
“We need a fair agreement, a fair process and fair shares of
climate action. What we have on the negotiation table now is increased effort
by more than 140 developing countries but it won’t avoid catastrophic climate
change unless rich countries have a dramatic change of heart. We need rich countries to urgently commit to
do their fair share.” Friends of the Earth International believes that the
solutions lie with people. Across the world ordinary people are resisting dirty
energy and building democratic, community and socially controlled power. “People
will have the last word in Paris. But the demonstrations in Paris will not be
the end. The struggle will continue, as it must, because the job will not be
done in Paris,” Susann Scherbarth added.
Admirable and commendable sentiments from FOE but totally unrealistic expectations. It will be business who will have the final say in Paris and unless the people campaign and struggle for socialism, all the promises and pledges from the corporations and countries will be meaningless.
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