NEW DELHI, India—On a late Friday afternoon as choking smog descended on the Indian Capital, François Richier, the French ambassador to India, took some hard questions from scores of journalists about the upcoming climate-change talks in Paris this month.
The journalists were discussing the run-up to global climate change 21st Conference of Parties (COP21) which starts on November 30 in Paris.
One of the reoccurring sentiments was that this meeting is a done deal and that little, if anything, would be accomplished. That what would come out of the almost two weeks of discussions, including among state leaders, would be a minimalistic deal that will keep everyone happy. The skeptics among the group even went as far as to say that the Americans were herding world opinion so that Paris 2015 would be President Barack Obama’s legacy.
“We are not supporting anybody,” Richier said, reacting to the accusations. He said France had taken it upon itself to get all these nations, 191 of them, to agree on a single document. Richier admitted that it was a daunting task.
“Reaching a universal agreement is quite a challenge, we are not sure we will succeed.”
But experts based in Asia caution that the Paris deal could end up lopsided in favor of developed nations.
“Actually, when you are negotiating climate change, you are negotiating economic growth, what you will see in Paris is freezing inequity,” Sunita Narain, the head of the New Delhi-based environmental research and advocacy body, the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), told Inter Press Service (IPS). What she and many others warn is that while countries agree on self-regulated emission cuts and no binding agreements on results or financial commitments, poorer nations and developing nations, like India and even China, would find their growth potential curbed if ever such a binding regime were to be set up in the future.
Historical base
Another concern among those like Narain is that the burden of emission lacks any historical base. All negotiations are done on current emission levels, but experts say that long-life gases, like carbon dioxide (CO2), can remain in the atmosphere for as long as 150 years and historical emissions should be considered when evaluating national emission levels.
At 2012 emission levels, China leads the list of CO2 emitters at 29 percent, the European Union (EU) second at 27 percent, the US third at 16 percent and India at 6 percent. But as Chandra Bhushan, CSE deputy director, argued, if the time span is stretched to reflect the longevity of the gas, the picture changes. Of all CO2 emissions since 1850-2011, the US accounts for 21.2 percent, EU 18 percent, China 10 percent and India 2.2 percent.
Bushan said climate negotiations are essentially, “about economy, not ecology. It is about dividing the carbon budget—how much the world can emit to stay below 2 degrees Celsius.”
His boss put it much more bluntly: “We are not saying that Asia and Africa should get the right to pollute. We are saying that Asia and Africa should get the right to develop.”
They fear that because of the controversial nature of these issues, they are unlikely to be included in any agreement reached in Paris.
“There is not a hope in hell that mention of carbon budget will survive in the [Paris] agreement,” Lavanya Rajamani, research professor at New Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research (CPR), said, referring to the 55-page draft that is currently in circulation.
Outside the main deal
Ambassador Richier conceded that any deal involving financial commitments would have to be dealt with outside the main agreement, primarily because such a commitment would need US Congress ratification. Rajamani also said the chances of the Paris agreement being pegged to results were minimal. “It is very unlikely we will have commitments.”
Narain, too, expressed similar foreboding sentiments. She feels that issues like accumulated emissions, carbon budget and strict emission cuts are unlikely to be discussed in Paris. “It is inconvenient [to a lot of the developed countries].”
Hopes not too high
Rajamani observed that given what is in store in Paris, the Global South should not get its hopes too high and should keep to realistic goals. One is to lay emphasis on the post Paris review process.
Just before the Paris meeting gets under way, the Asian capitals are abuzz that the French are reaching deals with individual countries to make sure they can get a decent Paris deal.
One such visit was in Beijing in late October and, reportedly, the French had reached a deal with the Chinese for a five-year review of self-set targets.
There was no confirmation of any such deal, and the French ambassador here was equivocal in defending his fellow diplomats’ visits arguing they were needed to keep the Paris negotiations on track. But both Rajamani and Narain said the agreement between China and France was for a review that looked at aggregated figures for regions and not individual countries. “We need to strengthen the global stock take far more,” Rajamani said.
Letdown
Former negotiators, however, said that global deals will always look like a letdown since they involved compromises across the board.
“Everyone is looking for that little bit of legroom, even that is what India has done, that is the way these things work,” said S B Agnihotri, former secretary to the Indian Ministry of New and Renewable.
The French Ambassador pleaded with the journalists, researchers and activists to give his government the benefit of the doubt, pledging that the concerns of the Global South will be addressed. “Any treaty must address development concerns.”
Whether that is the case, will be known in less than a month.