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The COP-28 deal left out a big point: Who pays and for what?
Mint Mumbai
|December 15, 2023
Only piffling sums were committed while funding needs are huge
Like over-caffeinated college students, Sultan AI Jaber, John Kerry and other COP-28 delegates pulled an allnighter to turn what could have been an 'F' grade on a global climate deal into a respectable 'C. Still, in their scramble to produce a historic pact, they left a glaring omission that could doom the whole enterprise in the longer run. They ignored the money constraint.
Give credit where it's due: The end product of this year's UN climate conclave, an agreement that the world needs to stop using fossil fuels, was the first of its kind and a drastic improvement over most CoPs, which are usually failures. Until a few years ago, these grand declarations barely acknowledged the existence of fossil fuels.
As Javier Blas notes, the final text has the fingerprints of Saudi Arabia and other big fossil-fuel producers all over it. Loopholes abound, including unseemly attention to carbon capture and storage, an expensive and unproven technology that oil producers likely hope will keep their expensive assets from being stranded underground.
This is an inevitable result of the CoP process, which requires buy-in from every single party-from polluters like the US to those on the front lines of global heating dangers like the Maldives.
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