Global Climate Talks Move to Marrakesh: Here’s What They Need to Achieve
By Dr AdilNajam
Dean
Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies
Boston University
and Henrik Selin
Associate Professor in the Frederick S Pardee School of Global Studies
Boston University

Even though   evidence   on an ever-worsening global climate keeps pouring in with alarming frequency, the last 12 months have, in fact, been a relatively   good year for global climate policy . Next week, the world’s countries meet in Marrakesh, Morocco, to follow up on the gains made at Paris last year, and to try to reconcile these two facts.

The   22nd conference of the parties (COP22)   to the UN climate change convention in Marrakesh will not result in a grand agreement or the grandiose chest-thumping that characterized its   Paris predecessor . Yet, this meeting is a critical test of whether the parties to the Paris Agreement are willing to realize, or capable of realizing, the promise of Paris and creating a momentum for action.

Post-Paris cheers: COP22 will begin with good wind behind its sails, but under some very ominous clouds.

The most visible political gain has been the ratification   in record time   of the Paris Agreement, which   enters into force   Nov. 4. By joining, countries have shown a willingness to act on reducing national emissions, although they stopped   short of taking on legal commitments . Notwithstanding the fact that the agreement is weak in terms of legally binding obligations, this rapid ratification signifies an important global buy-in.

Related signs of hope come from the two largest emitters,   China   and the   United States , that have begun investing in meaningful domestic initiatives. This is assisted by a palpable shift in the market economics of   renewables , especially wind and solar, whose costs in some parts of the world is now   rivaling or less than coal .

By far the most important potential game changer in real climatic terms was the agreement in October to   phase out the use of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) , a strong greenhouse gas. If fully implemented, this could remove the equivalent of   70 billion tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by 2050, mostly by developing countries.

Less consequential is the decision by the International Civil Aviation Organization to manage carbon dioxide   emissions from international aviation   through a carbon offset system. But it is still a step in the right direction. Unfortunately, the International Maritime Organization remained reluctant to agree to similar baby steps for the   international shipping industry .

Post-Paris tears: On the other hand, the growing set of new scientific evidence confirms climate change is no longer an issue of the future; it is the most pressing challenge of now.

Every month   this year has been the hottest ever recorded for that month since measurement began. This was yet another year of   alarming Arctic ice melt . And   2016   is poised to be the globally   hottest   year ever in historical record and the   40th consecutive year that the annual temperature would be above the 20th-century average.

The urgency of global climate change is evidenced by the discovery that the atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide have crossed   400 parts per million   and are unlikely to drop below this level in our lifetime. There should no longer be any doubt that we are quickly running out of time.

As its host Morocco bills Marrakesh as   “The COP of Action,”   COP22 should be judged by the   extent and urgency of implementable action   that it triggers in three critical areas: mitigation, adaptation and financing. And, within these, by how much attention and investment is directed towards the needs of the most vulnerable countries.

The goals of the   Paris Agreement   are to reach a global peak in GHG emissions as soon as possible with the intent of holding global average temperature increases to well below 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5°C.

In support of this, countries have formulated their voluntary commitments for the post-2020 period in the form of   Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) . There will be an informal dialogue of these NDCs in 2018 and a formal stocktaking to revisit these targets in 2023.

However, the current suite of NDCs is simply   not up to the task . Even with full implementation, there will be an estimated global average temperature increase of between   2.6°C and 3.1°C by 2100 . Waiting for 2018 or 2023 to review national commitments is too long and condemns the planet to a significant level of warming. For some island states, this could mean devastation.

There is a need to quickly raise ambitions. To come anywhere near the goals they have set for themselves for the next 10-15 years, countries need to have already started making significant, visible cuts in emissions. Most have not. Marrakesh needs to push countries to increased ambition and accelerated emission cuts.

 

Adaptation: Real resources needed

Living as we already do in the   “Age of Adaptation,”   it would be tragedy compounded if adaptation were to become the lost issue of the Paris Agreement.

For many countries – especially the most vulnerable developing countries that have had the least to do with causing the problem and are least able to cope with its impacts – adaptation is not insurance for the future; it is an   urgent need of today . Most often, the biggest challenges relate to   water and agriculture .

The issue is one of resources and investment. There are   plenty of dedicated funds established to provide money for adaptation measures. Too often, however, industrialized countries have failed to fulfill their pledges, and access to funds is made difficult by complex procedure and criteria.

Marrakesh needs to ensure that real money is available for adaptation, including a greater share of resources from developed countries dedicated to   climate change action in developing countries . And funds need to be accessible to the countries most in need and on terms that meet their own national capabilities and priorities.

 

Financing: Show me the $100B

The Paris Agreement calls on all countries to ensure that finance flows worldwide are consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development.

Developed countries have pledged to mobilize jointly at least   US$100 billion a year   from public and private sources in support of mitigation and adaptation in developing countries by 2020, to be scaled up over time as part of the implementation of the Paris Agreement.

Finance discussions, however, are   plagued by political disagreements   over what should legitimately be counted as climate finance as well as data uncertainties and difficulties in correctly calculating contributions   from different sources .

Developing countries, especially   small island states , worry that much of this will be “ imaginary money ” that will never materialize – at least not in ways in which it can be deployed toward addressing their climate vulnerabilities and survival needs.

COP22 needs to directly address the issue and the legitimate concerns of different stakeholders. A reasonable goal for Marrakesh would be to bring more clarity to the finance issue including what dollars count, how and for what, and how they flow, to whom and for what priorities.

 

Make Marrakesh the ‘Action COP’

COP21 at Paris set for itself the goal of   delivering an agreement . It did. COP22 in Marrakesh has a much more difficult, and important, goal. It must deliver action. This is not going to be easy.

If Marrakesh can build on the   policy momentum of Paris   and the dire scientific warnings that have become irrefutable to spur countries to real action, then it would achieve   a historic and heroic feat   worthy of a true “Action COP.”

 

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