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UN chief rattled by Durban climate summit prospects

Published 01 June 2011 - Updated 07 June 2011
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The chief of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) has plainly expressed his fears of failure at "a very critical moment" in the history of UN climate change talks later this autumn. He spoke to EurActiv in an exclusive interview.

"At this point, everyone should be extremely concerned about what we will walk away with from Durban," Achim Steiner, UNEP's executive director, told EurActiv.

"Without a global climate agreement, we will never be able to achieve the levels of emissions reductions that are needed and with every year that passes, the time window is getting narrower," he said.

The latest International Energy Association figures show that greenhouse gas emissions soared by a record amount last year to 30.6 gigatonnes, the highest carbon output in history.

Trying to achieve CO2 emissions cuts in a shorter future timeframe would pose "a much greater risk to the global economy, national economies and to human wellbeing," Steiner said.

Durban objectives

The first goal of the Durban meeting will be securing a global climate agreement to replace the Kyoto Protocol's first commitment period, which ends in 2012.

But the EU's climate action commissioner, Connie Hedegaard, and the US's lead climate negotiator, Todd Stern, have both dismissed the chances of agreeing a legally binding deal this autumn. 

Behind the scenes, Jacob Zuma's government in South Africa has come in for heavy criticism in Brussels for a lack of leadership, drive and clarity in its pre-summit preparations.

Commissioner Hedegaard told EurActiv that whatever happened in Durban, EU legislation would ensure that from 2013, "we will only have offsetting for the least developed countries, not for emerging economies like today".

"So there's already a major transition in the pipeline," she continued, "but that is one of the things that we will use to discuss with our partners in Durban: they want this system to continue. OK. What will they give in return?"

Outstanding issues

Outstanding issues in Durban will include numbers and timetables for legally-binding emission cuts, details of a $100 billion per year Green Climate Fund for aid and mitigation, and ways of categorising 'developed' and 'developing' countries for climate targets.  

Attempts by developing countries to reopen the debate on strengthening the current global warming target from 2°C to 1.5°C have been supported by the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework on Climate Change, Christiana Figueres.

Steiner acknowledged that failure to reach agreement would not prevent "incremental progress" and efforts to bridge a global climate policy. But it would still cause "major disappointment and frustration across the board," in his view.

"I think that the historians will one day write off the decade of 2010-2020 as one of the tragic moments of indecision," he said, "of an international community and a world economy that was perfectly capable of moving to another level of carbon emissions trajectories but didn't choose to do so for what will then seem, perhaps, completely extraneous reasons".

The world's largest historic emitter of CO2, the US, has never ratified the Kyoto Agreement, while the biggest contemporary polluter, China, is currently excluded as a developing country.

Because of this, Japan, Russia and Canada have refused to sign a Kyoto successor agreement which they say will only cover about 30% of global emissions.

Arthur Neslen

Background: 

The Copenhagen UN climate change conference in December 2009 was designed to outline a new international treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires at the end of 2012.

But after two weeks of extenuating talks, world leaders delivered an agreement that left Europeans "disappointed" as it did not include binding commitments to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

The result was a minimalist deal, called the 'Copenhagen Accord', which included a pledge by developed countries to raise $100 billion per year by 2020 to help climate efforts in poor countries.

At the Cancun summit which followed it in December 2010, a compromise agreement wrote the Copenhagen commitments into climate law. The agreed framework officially recognising 1990 as a base year for measuring emissions, and the goal of containing global warming to 2 degrees Centigrade.

It also established the Green Climate Fund pledged in Denmark, brought forward adaptation and technology frameworks, implemented some forest protection measures, and tied carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology into the UN’s Clean Development Mechanism.

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