What was agreed at COP24 in Poland and why did it take so
long?
Fractious UN climate change talks ended with a deal on
putting the Paris agreement into practice – but much else left unresolved
‘We can move forward now’: climate talks take significant
step
Fiona Harvey in Katowice
Sun 16 Dec 2018 12.04 GMT Last modified on Sun 16 Dec 2018
18.00 GMT
What was agreed at COP24?
Countries settled on most of the tricky elements of the
“rulebook” for putting the 2015 Paris agreement into practice. This includes
how governments will measure, report on and verify their emissions-cutting
efforts, a key element because it ensures all countries are held to proper
standards and will find it harder to wriggle out of their commitments.
Why did it take so long?
There was a row over carbon credits, which are awarded to
countries for their emissions-cutting efforts and their carbon sinks, such as
forests, which absorb carbon. These credits count towards countries’
emissions-cutting targets. Brazil, which hopes to benefit from its large
rainforest cover, insisted on a new form of wording that critics said would
allow double counting of credits, undermining the integrity of the system. This
issue has been put off until next year.
What wasn’t agreed?
Largely absent from these talks, which had a technical
focus, was the key question of how countries will step up their targets on
cutting emissions. On current targets, the world is set for 3C of warming from
pre-industrial levels, which scientists say would be disastrous, resulting in
droughts, floods, sea level rises and the decline of agricultural productivity.
When will that be agreed?
The key deadline is 2020, when countries must show they have
met targets set a decade ago for cutting their emissions, and when they must
affirm new, much tougher targets.
What does the science say?
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the
global body of the world’s leading climate scientists, warned two months ago
that allowing warming to reach 1.5C above pre-industrial levels would have
grave consequences, including the die-off of coral reefs and devastation of
many species.
How long have we got?
If we extrapolate from the IPCC’s findings, the world has
little more than a decade to bring emissions under control and halve them,
which would help to stabilise the climate.
Are we getting there?
After years in which the world’s carbon emissions appeared
to be stabilising, they are on the rise again. Coal use continues and oil is
still the engine of much of the world’s economy. Clean energy is coming
on-stream at a faster rate than many predicted, and the costs of it have come
down rapidly, but its adoption needs to be speeded up.
Infrastructure, such as energy generation plants, transport
networks and buildings, is a central issue: infrastructure built now to rely on
high-carbon energy effectively locks in high emissions for decades to come.
Some people are also saying we need to invest in projects to remove carbon from
the atmosphere, and a new focus of the talks is helping countries to adapt to
the effects of climate change.
The US, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait joined forces to
prevent the conference fully embracing the IPCC’s findings, watering down a
statement to a weak commendation of the timing of the scientists’ report.
Australia joined with the US in a celebration of coal, and Brazil signalled its
climate scepticism under Jair Bolsonaro by withdrawing its offer to host next
year’s talks.
But the EU, a handful of other developed countries and
scores of developing nations including the poorest and most vulnerable affirmed
that they would strive to meet the IPCC’s advice on limiting warming to no more
than 1.5C.
What happens next?
The UN will meet again next year in Chile to thrash out the
final elements of the Paris rulebook and begin work on future emissions
targets. But the crunch conference will come in 2020, when countries must meet
the deadline for their current emissions commitments and produce new targets
for 2030 and beyond that go further towards meeting scientific advice.
That conference may be held in the UK or Italy, both of
which have bid to be hosts. The UK’s intention in offering to host is to signal
it will retain its role on the world stage after Brexit. The event may also
provide a welcome change from wranglings over Brexit and intractable trade
deals. But whoever hosts will have a diplomatic mountain to climb, if the
fractious nature of this year’s talks is anything to go by.
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