http://www.fpif.org/articles/durbans_climate_debacle

Durban's Climate Debacle

By Janet Redman, January 5, 2012

I arrived at the UN climate summit in Durban, South Africa with the 
news fresh in my mind that 2010 was a record year for global warming 
pollution-and that if we don't start reducing global emissions by 
2017, we're cooked.

I left Durban with a profound disappointment in the world's leaders, 
and the growing conviction that it will take people putting their 
bodies on the line to steer society away from suicidal climate change.

Disappointing Delivery

Many important issues were up for debate at the climate talks, 
including forest protection, indigenous rights, and water 
conservation. But only two were front and center: reducing greenhouse 
gas emissions and the proposed transfer of hundreds of billions of 
dollars from developed to developing countries to help cover the 
costs of dealing with climate change. The latter is known as "climate 
finance."

What we got was largely a set of promises to do somethingĀŠ some other time.

The 194 countries participating in the summit did adopt a Green 
Climate Fund to manage the $100 billion per year in long-term climate 
finance that developed countries promised to deliver at the 
Copenhagen summit in 2009.

They agreed to limit the power of the private sector by including 
provisions for nationally designated institutions to have the final 
say over funding decisions, thus weakening the threat that Wall 
Street investors could bypass national governments and directly 
access funds that were meant for the poor through a private sector 
sub-fund. The summit even yielded an agreement on an open bidding 
process for selecting the fund's long-term trustee and its permanent 
secretariat, a move that keeps the World Bank - a major financier of 
dirty energy and creator of third-world debt - at bay.

Unfortunately, climate negotiators didn't agree on raising the money 
that would fill the Green Climate Fund - in large part thanks to 
countries like the United States that tried their best to derail any 
meaningful conversation on long-term finance. In the end, virtually 
every country on Earth reached a compromise to launch a work program 
that analyzes possible sources of long-term money.

Another Empty Shell

In other words, the Green Climate Fund will remain an empty bank 
account while yet another study is added to the pile. There are 
already similar reports from a UN high-level panel, the World Bank, 
Bill Gates, and myriad environmental and development groups.

The news on reducing emissions isn't any sunnier. Yes, some countries 
committed to a second round of pollution cuts under the Kyoto 
Protocol - the only legally binding international treaty regulating 
greenhouse gas emissions. But the text of the decision that adopts 
this second commitment period doesn't name an overall reduction 
target and only "takes note" of the cuts individual countries 
proposed. In the aftermath of Durban, the Kyoto Protocol has no real 
teeth and lacks a global reduction goal based on science.

And since Canada, Russia, and Japan pulled out of the Kyoto Protocol, 
and the remaining countries (New Zealand, Australia, and EU members) 
pushed their favorite loopholes and exceptions, it's hard to see what 
the use would be of enforcing the treaty anyway.

Pablo Solon, Bolivia's former UN ambassador and chief negotiator, 
speculates that the treaty was put on life support mainly to keep 
carbon trading - a system for outsourcing climate compliance in which 
the Europeans have heavily invested - alive. He lamented that "the 
Kyoto Protocol will turn into a zombie without a global figure for 
reduction of emissions by industrialised countries, and will carry on 
walking just so that carbon markets don't disappear."

Another Empty Promise

While the existing plan for climate action was relegated to the world 
of the undead, a new mandate was drummed up that calls on all 
countries to take action - poor and rich alike - that contains no 
mention of equity and no provisions putting emission cuts in the 
context of sustainable development for poor countries.

In the great tradition of political double-speak, the new mandate is 
officially known as the Durban Platform for Enhanced Ambition. 
Ironically, this plan, if you can call it that, delays implementation 
until at least 2020. That's three years after the deadline for global 
action given by the International Energy Agency to avoid impending 
climate chaos.

Washington pushed aggressively for the new mandate, arguing that if a 
legally binding treaty covered all "major" economies - shorthand for 
long-industrialized countries plus new powerhouses like China, India, 
Brazil, and South Africa - then 80 percent of the world's emissions 
would fall under regulation. This doesn't mean, of course, that 80 
percent of all emissions would be cut. If history is any indicator, 
these powerful nations - especially those in the global North - will 
try to do as little as they can get away with.

Never Failing to Fail

I've now attended five UN climate summits. I've grown accustomed to 
being let down by governments that settle for weak outcomes, push 
soft positions, and display a disappointing commitment to 
business-as-usual. But this year was even lamer than usual.

Consider Canada's performance. It officially withdrew from the Kyoto 
Protocol the day after the climate summit ended in an attempt to 
avoid losing face at the end of 2012, when it would have inevitably 
come up short of its legally binding emission cuts. So much for 
entering into treaties in good faith.

The United States, however, deserves the global spoiler award. Back 
in November, it was one of two countries that blocked consensus on 
the design of the Green Climate Fund. A month later, during the 
Durban summit, Washington blocked any discussion of specific sources 
of climate finance or detailed language on the finance work program. 
There were even rumors that, in the final hours of negotiations, a 
minister overheard U.S. climate envoy Todd Stern threaten in a heated 
huddle on the legal form of the new mandate that "if equity's in, 
we're out." That meme then zipped around the world on Twitter.

While the United States government was insisting that China do more 
to reduce its carbon footprint at the climate negotiations in Durban, 
at home the Obama administration was rolling ahead with plans to take 
China to international trade court for what U.S. solar companies 
claim are unfair supports for the Chinese solar industry. Talk about 
damned if you do, damned if you don't. And in Congress, the House 
passed a bill prohibiting U.S. airlines from complying with (i.e., 
encouraging U.S. airlines to break) a European law placing a fuel 
levy on all flights landing or taking off in the European Union. The 
levy is meant to reduce pollution and raise money to help 
less-developed nations cope with climate change.

This obstructionist behavior wouldn't have surprised me so much if I 
thought our government had anything to use as a bargaining chip to 
get countries to go along with our bottom lines. Maybe foreign aid? 
How about our own comprehensive climate plan? The Obama 
administration had nothing like that to leverage. In fact, the U.S. 
negotiating team had asserted for months that it would only support 
measures that could get through Congress. With the House chock full 
of climate deniers at the moment, we all know that's just about 
nothing.

Time for a Timeout

Countries - especially developing ones - could have called their 
bluff and suggested that since Washington had nothing useful to 
offer, it should take a timeout for the next one-to-four years so the 
rest of the world could move forward with a robust climate deal. 
Instead, representatives from everywhere from Bangladesh to the 
Democratic Republic of Congo gave eloquent speeches in the final 
plenary about how Durban's outcome would condemn drought-stricken 
countries in Africa to famine, small island nations to 
obliterationĀŠbut conceded that they would go along with the new 
Durban Platform anyway.

Only Venezuelan special envoy for climate change Claudia Salerno 
raised her voice to caution colleagues against agreeing to a bad deal 
just because they were exhausted and desperate. Actually, because the 
U.S. chair of the session would not recognize her, she climbed up on 
the table waving her arms up, and then made these remarks.

The Good News: People Power

So here's my takeaway from the 17th Conference of the Parties to the 
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP17): I say we take a 
cue from Venezuela's Salerno and get on our feet.

Lester Brown, founder of the Worldwatch Institute and president of 
the Earth Policy Institute, recently published research revealing 
that the United States has seen a 7-percent downturn in its carbon 
footprint between 2007 and 2011 - largely due to a drop in coal 
consumption. Brown attributes the sustained drop to a surge in 
grassroots campaigns to shut down dirty power plants that includes 
hundreds of local struggles and the Sierra Club's national Beyond 
Coal campaign.

People are taking to the streets in China, too. More than 30,000 
citizens occupied a highway in near Haimen, a city of 1 million that 
sits across the Yangtze River delta from Shanghai, to denounce the 
pollution spewing from a coal-fired power plant that's dirtying their 
air and water and jeopardizing their livelihoods, and to protest 
plans for another new facility. The central government has, at least 
for now, suspended plans to build the new power plant.

 From El Salvador to Indonesia, people are shutting down local sources 
of pollution that hurt their families and communities. They're 
constructing the building blocks of healthy societies, setting up 
local food partnerships, solar energy cooperatives, and zero waste 
recycling initiatives.

The lesson I'm carrying into 2012 is that people who care about the 
climate must focus more on thinking globally but acting locally. We 
have to build more local alliances with our neighbors, whose 
immediate demands can be taken to our locally elected officials. We 
need to start inviting those policymakers most accountable to us into 
dialogues where we put our proposals for an ecologically sane future 
on the table, and work with them to turn ideas into concrete 
realities.

The Occupy phenomenon has made the vision of a widespread popular 
movement for systemic change more realistic. The lack of political 
will among our leaders that's deepening the environmental crisis 
makes it a necessity.

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