COP29 negotiators strive for deal after G20 'marching orders'

Negotiators toiled Tuesday to break a deadlock at UN climate talks after G20 leaders acknowledged the need for trillions of dollars for poorer nations but left key sticking points unresolved.

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November 20, 2024 This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies . Editors have highlightedthe following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility: fact-checked reputable news agency proofread by Nick Perry, Benjamin Legendre and Laurent Thomet Negotiators toiled Tuesday to break a deadlock at UN climate talks after G20 leaders acknowledged the need for trillions of dollars for poorer nations but left key sticking points unresolved. With three days left in the COP29 conference, ministers haggling in Azerbaijan had been waiting for the G20 meeting in Rio de Janeiro to issue a declaration that might jump-start the stalled negotiations.

Activists and diplomats gave the text a mixed verdict, saying the statement lacked enough direction on climate finance and failed to explicitly mention the need to transition away from fossil fuels . The lead negotiator of COP29 hosts Azerbaijan, Yalchin Rafiyev, said the G20 statement sent "positive signals" to the efforts in Baku. "G20 delegations now have their marching orders for here in Baku," UN climate chief Simon Stiell said in a statement.



"We urgently need all nations to bypass the posturing and move swiftly towards common ground, across all issues," he said. Brazil is host of next year's climate talks in the Amazonian gateway of Belem, and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva urged good progress in Baku. "We cannot leave the task of Baku until Belem," Lula told the G20 summit.

G20 hopes 'too high'? Rich nations are being urged to significantly raise their pledge of $100 billion a year to help developing countries adapt to climate change and transition to clean energy. But efforts to finalize the deal in Baku are hampered by disputes over how much the deal should entail, who should pay for it, and what types of financing should be included. Those key questions were not answered in the G20 statement.

"We were waiting for a boost. Our expectations were maybe too high," a European negotiator told AFP. The declaration, however, recognizes "the need for rapidly and substantially scaling up climate finance from billions to trillions from all sources".

It also states the need to increase international collaboration "with a view to scaling up public and private climate finance and investment for developing countries". Michai Robertson, a negotiator for the Alliance of Small Island States, said the G20 paragraph on climate finance "is not saying much". Adonia Ayebare, the Ugandan chairman of the G77+China grouping of developing nations, told AFP the Rio statement was a "good building block" for the climate talks.

But Ayebare said he was "not comfortable" with the wording saying the money should come from "all sources". "We have been insisting that this has to be from public sources. Grants, not loans," Ayebare said.

Harsen Nyambe, head of the 55-nation African Union delegation at COP29, said the G20 "had a statement of goodwill". "But it's up to the countries who are negotiating here at the end of the day to decide what they want to put forward for the globe," he told reporters. Discover the latest in science, tech, and space with over 100,000 subscribers who rely on Phys.

org for daily insights. Sign up for our free newsletter and get updates on breakthroughs, innovations, and research that matter— daily or weekly . Can't 'backslide' A new draft deal on climate finance is expected by Wednesday night.

Some developing countries, which are the least responsible for global greenhouse gas emissions , want an annual commitment of $1.3 trillion. "The reality of the situation is that 1.

3 trillion pales in the face of the seven trillion that is spent annually on fossil fuel subsidies," Fiji's deputy prime minister, Biman Prasad, told COP29 delegates. "The money is there. It is just in exactly the wrong place," he said.

Developed nations, facing their own debt problems and budget deficits, say the private sector must play a key role in climate finance. The United States and European Union are also pushing for the donor base to be expanded to include countries such as China, which has become the world's second-biggest economy but is still officially listed as a developing nation. Negotiators say the talks have also been held up by Saudi Arabia's resistance to any reference to last year's pledge at COP28 in the United Arab Emirates for the world to move away from fossil fuels.

"Let me state once again that we as a global community cannot afford to backslide," EU climate envoy Wopke Hoekstra said in a speech, without naming any country. "We all must build on what we call the UAE consensus. There is simply no success without it," he said.

© 2024 AFP.