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Progrès enregistré sur le “Green Fund”

Publié 06 septembre 2010
Étiquettes
climate climate aid
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Ce vendredi (3 septembre) près de 50 nations ont fait des progrès envers un “Green Fund” visant à aider les pays pauvres à lutter contre le réchauffement climatique.  Cependant les hôtes, le Mexique et la Suisse, ont déclaré qu’un traité des Nations Unies complet sur le climat serait inaccessible pour 2010.

Environment ministers and senior officials meeting in Geneva also examined how to raise a promised $100 billion a year in climate aid from 2020 - perhaps from carbon markets, higher plane fares or taxes on shipping - to be managed by the Fund.

"We think we should be able to establish the Green Fund in the conference in Cancún," Mexico's Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa said after the informal 2-3 September talks among 46 nations in Geneva.

Mexico will host an annual UN climate meeting in Cancún from 29 November to 10 December. A Green Fund is meant to help poor nations shift from fossil fuels and cope with projected floods, droughts, mudslides and rising seas caused by climate change.

Espinosa said any deal in Cancún would fall short of a treaty, part of a lowering of hopes after the UN's Copenhagen summit in 2009 agreed only a non-binding deal. Cancún might decide to build any deals into a treaty, perhaps in 2011.

"We created a lot of expectations in Copenhagen that we would get a comprehensive, legally binding solution. We are no longer fixated on that," Swiss Environment Minister Moritz Leuenberger told a news conference with co-host Espinosa.

Forests, clean tech

Espinosa said a Green Fund would only be agreed as part of a broad package in Cancún, including ways to share clean-energy technologies or protect carbon-absorbing forests. She said all elements of the package had to be agreed, or none.

US climate envoy Todd Stern told a news conference that the meeting had been "pretty constructive".

"The biggest issue is [...] this has to be part of a package. We are not going to move on the Green Fund, and the $100 billion, if issues central to the Copenhagen Accord, including mitigation and transparency, don't also move," he said.

Stern also reiterated that US President Barack Obama was committed to cutting US greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 even though the Senate has failed to pass legislation. The United States is the only major developed nation with no legal cap.

Connie Hedegaard, the European Union's climate commissioner, said that there was "some convergence" on the Green Fund but little sign of movement on underlying issues from China and the United States, the top greenhouse gas emitters.

"We've seen nothing new coming out of the US, nothing new coming out of China. So we have to be very practical," she said of a focus on steps that fall short of a treaty.

Earlier, the Netherlands launched a UN-backed website to try to track how far rich nations, struggling with austerity, are able to keep a pledge made in Copenhagen to give poor nations $30 billion in "new and additional" climate aid from 2010-12.

Christiana Figueres, the UN's climate chief, said the cash was a "golden key" to convince poor nations that the rich were serious in taking the lead to curb global warming. Under the Copenhagen Accord, flows would surge to $100 billion a year from 2020.

So far, the website lists cash promises by six European donors including Germany and Britain and 27 recipients from Bangladesh to the Marshall Islands. Stern said Washington would submit US data in coming weeks.

Many of the developing nations' sites, listing cash received, are blank.

(EurActiv with Reuters.)

Réactions : 

The European Network on Debt and Development (Eurodad) called on European governments to build on a Dutch government initiative to track aid commitments and integrate global transparency standards for climate finance.

The civil society organisations argued that comparable standards are needed to prvent double counting previous commitments against new climate pledges.

"We welcome efforts to improve access to information on climate finance commitments, but the new web site does not meet the minimum standards of transparency needed to ensure that these funds can be tracked and used effectively," said Nora Honkaniemi, advocacy officer at Eurodad.

The standards should establish what qualifies as climate financing and define what money counts as new and additional, the NGOs said.

Moreover, they should be compatible with emerging aid transparency standards being developed in the International Aid Transparency Initiative and provide comprehensive information "covering the full range of channels, policy, terms and conditions, allocations and disbursements, details of transactions, and governance arrangements of the climate funds," they added.

Prochaines étapes : 
  • 4-9 Oct. 2010: Next round of talks in Tianjin, China.
  • 9 Nov.-10 Dec. 2010: UN climate conference in Cancún, Mexico (COP16). Objective is to advance negotiations on basis of Copenhagen Accord. No binding agreement is expected.
  • 28 Nov.-9 Dec. 2011: UN climate conference in South Africa (COP17). Possible date for approving new international climate treaty. 
Contexte : 

The Copenhagen UN climate change conference in December 2009 was designed to outline a new international treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 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 (EurActiv19/12/09).

The result was a minimalist deal, called the 'Copenhagen Accord', which confirmed that deep cuts in global emissions "will be required" to maintain global temperature increases below 2°C and that countries will take action to achieve this.

The next high-level round of talks in Cancún at the end of the year is now hoped to deliver the necessary architecture for issues like adaptation, mitigation, finance, reducing emissions from deforestation (REDD), and monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV).

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