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Developing countries call for working groups to resume climate talks Reiterating
the centrality of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change as the
legitimate forum for climate negotiations, a number of developing countries
have called for the resumption of the two-track process of negotiations
agreed to at the 2007 UN Climate Change Conference in Meena Raman SEVERAL
developing countries are calling for climate negotiations to quickly
resume under the two working groups established under the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Kyoto Protocol,
following the These
calls are being made as the issue of what will be the basis of the climate
negotiations this year is emerging, viz. if it is the Copenhagen Accord
(which was not adopted by the UNFCCC Conference of Parties in Copenhagen)
or the outcome documents produced from the Ad hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the Convention (AWG-LCA) as well as the Ad
hoc Working Group on Further Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP). The outcome documents from both these working
groups were adopted by the It appears that confusion has been generated by the Danish Prime Minister, who hosted the UNFCCC's 15th meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP 15), and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, through their letter of 30 December 2009 to several countries asking them to 'publicly associate with the Accord' and to garner support for it, when the COP only 'took note of' the Accord and did not adopt it. Several
developing-country diplomats spoke at a multi-stakeholder discussion
convened by the UN Non-Governmental Liaison Service (NGLS), Realising
Rights (an NGO headed by former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Mary Robinson) and the Dag Hammarskj”ld Foundation in the United Nations
in New York on 25 January, on the theme 'COP 15 and Climate Justice
- Collapse, Greenwash or New Impetus for the Future'. The speakers
included representatives from Their
main message was that the climate negotiations must resume in the two
negotiating tracks of the AWG-LCA as well as the AWG-KP, in the run-up
to the COP 16 meeting in BASIC countries' call Ambassador
Lumumba Stanislaus Diaping of The
BASIC group Ministers underscored the centrality of the UNFCCC process
and the decision of the Parties to carry forward the negotiations on
the two tracks of the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP. The Ministers reiterated
that all negotiations must be conducted in an inclusive and transparent
manner and called upon the COP President ( While expressing support for the Copenhagen Accord, the BASIC group Ministers said that the Accord is in the nature of a political agreement, representing a high level of political understanding among the participants on some of the contentious issues of the climate change negotiations. They had expressed hope that this would facilitate the two-track process of negotiations under the Bali Roadmap. According to an Inter Press Service (IPS) news report of the joint press conference by the BASIC Ministers after their seven-hour meeting, India's Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh is reported to have said that while Ministers supported the Copenhagen Accord, all of them were unanimously of the view that the value of the Accord lies not as a stand-alone document but as an input into the two-track negotiation process under the UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol. Minister
Ramesh is further reported to have explained that the Accord was not
a legal document but rather an 'understanding' reached at The
Copenhagen Accord is a three-page non-legally binding document that
was negotiated in what several developing countries saw as an untransparent
and non-inclusive process, involving only a selected 26 countries. It
was not adopted by the COP in The Third World Network, which also spoke at the 25 January NGO meeting at the UN, said that the most glaring omission of the Accord was its failure to provide for aggregate emission cuts by developed countries in the mid-term or any reference to the comparability of efforts among them (i.e. the US as a non-Party to the Kyoto Protocol is supposed to take mitigation actions comparable to the Protocol Parties). There was also no mechanism for review of the adequacy of the pledges or a compliance mechanism consistent with that of the Kyoto Protocol. Instead, all developed countries have to do is just pledge the emissions cuts they will individually or jointly undertake, with no requirement for the establishment of an aggregate figure which is consistent with the science - contrary to the Kyoto Protocol. As regards the Accord, Ambassador Lumumba said that proponents of the Accord should analyse what is not in the Accord, instead of pushing countries to associate with it. He took issue with the 2 degrees Celsius temperature limit mentioned in the Accord, as he said that this was not what the science says should be safe for a continent such as Africa. Ambassador
Pablo Solon of Robert
Orr, the Assistant Secretary-General for strategic planning and policy
coordination in the UN, also addressed the NGO event. He said that the
UNFCCC process must gain universal support as it is the only legitimate
forum for the negotiations. He said that the Danish presidency and the
Mexican presidency ( Martin
Khor, the Executive Director of the South Centre, said at the same meeting
that the way forward for the negotiations is to go back to the two tracks
of the working groups. Countries that sign the Copenhagen Accord can
bring their understanding into the negotiating tracks. A key issue to
address must be the commitment by developed countries who are Parties
to the Kyoto Protocol to aggregate emission reduction targets and comparable
efforts by the The
representative of Promoting
the A
note verbale dated 30 December 2009 was sent by the Permanent Mission
of Denmark to the UN to all missions of UNFCCC Parties in A separate joint letter was also sent on the same day by the Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to the heads of state and government of the 26 countries who were supposed to have been involved in drafting the Accord, asking them to 'publicly associate themselves with the Accord', and also encouraging Parties to garner support for the Accord through regional and negotiating groupings including through bilateral efforts. It also invited Parties to submit their emission reduction targets and actions for 2020 to the UNFCCC secretariat by 31 January 2010. Several developing countries expressed deep concern that the UN Secretary-General was seen as promoting the Accord which was not adopted by the COP. Indian
Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh is reported to have sent a strongly
worded letter to the Danish premier as well as the UN Secretary-General
questioning the premise of their letter that the Accord would be 'an
essential first step in a process leading to a robust international
climate treaty'. Reports suggest that Dr Singh's response was to reject
this premise of the Rasmussen-Ban letter and to stress that this was
not the understanding of the BASIC countries at Sources indicate that other developing countries have also written to the Danish premier, the UN Secretary-General and the Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC expressing their unhappiness over how the Accord is being promoted, even though it was not adopted by the COP. According
to several diplomats in One
developing-country diplomat in Some developing-country diplomats are worried that the Accord would undermine the current climate regime, which is the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol, by laying the foundation for a new treaty that will alter the rights, balance of obligations and principles of the Convention and the Protocol. Some
developing-country groupings are meeting in February to discuss the
This article is reproduced from the South-North Development Monitor (SUNS, No. 6852, 29 January 2010). *Third World Resurgence No. 233, January 2010, pp 22-24 |
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