Is India Resisting Global Regulations on Plastic?

India is among other oil, gas and petrochemical-producing countries, such as Saudi Arabia, Iran and China, that are attempting to dilute provisions and mechanisms that would deal with the entire life cycle of plastics.

New Delhi: The fourth session of the negotiations to develop an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution concluded in Ottawa earlier this year. While countries like Peru and Rwanda took the lead in proposing plans for drastic cuts in the production of plastics, India along with other petrochemical-producing countries attempted to limit the scope of what is being envisioned as a global treaty.

India and countries such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran and China, labelled as a “like-minded group”, showed significant resistance against any measures that would deal with plastic production, as their economies depend on fossil fuels and their derivatives. The Indian delegation repeatedly emphasised the crucial role the plastics industry plays in the economies of developing countries and how phasing it out would have far-reaching social and economic implications.

For its objection to any restrictions on the building blocks of plastic, its claims on plastic pollution that have been contested by several established scientific studies, its constant but fractured invocations of “sovereignty” in assigning responsibility and its bickering over minor textual changes, the Indian delegation’s stance has come under severe criticism.

Experts believe that India’s stance does not bode well for a global treaty with any meaningful implications. India’s demands on several counts, even if met halfway, would eventually create such an open-ended and diluted mechanism that it would have a negligible impact on the entire lifecycle of plastics.

Why a global treaty

Plastic production increased nearly 230-fold from about two million tonnes in the 1950s to 460 million tonnes in 2019. It is expected to grow to 34 billion tonnes by 2050. Increasingly, the world has realised the need to curtail plastic not just because of its adverse effects on human health and the environment, but due to its link to the oil and gas industry – over 99% of chemicals used for producing plastics are derived from fossil fuels.

When burnt for energy generation, plastic releases as many greenhouse gases as its source material. On the other hand, globally, only 9% of plastic gets recycled. Interestingly, these are the two solutions offered by many countries, including India, to offset the indiscriminate use of plastics.

But recent research has established that recycling and reuse as forms of waste management can never be enough to contain plastic pollution. Consequently, environmental activists and organisations across the world believe that the responsibility of mitigating plastic pollution should be shared by the producers of plastics.

However, compared to the international discussions on climate, where there is plenty of discourse on cutting down fossil fuels, there is far less unanimity on reducing plastic production.

The current negotiation sessions are being held under the aegis of an intergovernmental negotiating committee (INC) that began work in 2022. The INC was a direct outcome of 175 countries of the UN Environment Assembly voting to adopt a global treaty by the end of 2024 that will address plastic through its entire lifecycle – production, usage and disposal.

Also read: India’s Huge Thrust on Petrochemicals Belies its Tall Talk on Sustainable Energy

Why the focus on polymers

“There must not be any cap/binding target for the reduction or phase-out on the production of plastic polymers,” read India’s submission at INC 4. A polymer is a chain of molecules, either naturally occurring or human-made. Plastics are made from synthetic polymers that are derived from petrochemicals.

The Indian delegation’s stance is that multiple sectors of our economy rely on plastics and some of them are irreplaceable – such as those used in heart transplants and the airline industry.

Haren Sanghavi, a member of the All India Plastic Manufacturers Association (AIPMA), which was also part of INC 4, said that any attempt to put curbs on the plastic polymer industry would have a cascading effect that would hit the most vulnerable first.

“There will be a big loss to the shelf life of food products in the absence of plastics. Since all other forms of packaging are more expensive … it will increase product costs, which will hit the common man’s pocket first,” he told The Wire.

Cuba, Algeria, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, the UAE, Iraq, Venezuela, Russia and a few other countries also opposed the global reduction targets regarding plastic polymers. They argued that such curbs were beyond the treaty’s mandate – the treaty was meant to target “pollution” and not the existence of plastic.

They wanted to limit focus to just “problematic or avoidable plastics” that have no utility other than their primary function and are damaging to the environment, such as short-lived and one-time-use plastics. The argument was that if problematic plastics are tackled, then the polymers used to make them will anyway be eliminated. In India’s view, it has already taken the step to stop those types of plastics by banning single-use plastics.

Additionally, all these countries, including India, said that any attempts to impose restrictive measures on the petrochemical and gas-chemical industries were “unacceptable” since “no plastic pollution is generated at this stage of the production value chain”.

But the latest study by the US National Laboratory stated the opposite, as it showed that about 75% of greenhouse gas emissions from plastics happened even before the production of polymers.

In addition, several studies, such as as the Grid Arendal study, and the inputs of the Scientists’ Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty and the International Science Council, noted that it would be extremely difficult to achieve the Paris Agreement’s goal of capping global temperature rise at 1.5 degrees Celsius if there are no reductions in the production of primary plastic polymers, which are the basic components that make up plastic.

So, Peru and Rwanda took a different view and presented a proposal for intersessional work, expert meetings in between official INC sessions, on primary plastic polymers to reduce 40% of the global use of primary plastic polymers by 2040.

About 28 countries, including some European and southeast Asian countries, as well as small island developing states (SIDS), launched the Bridge to Busan Declaration on Plastic Polymers to rally parties in support of keeping the provision for addressing primary plastic polymers alive in the treaty text. Bigger developed countries like the United States and the United Kingdom, however, did not back the ambitious call.

Experts believe that if plastic production is unregulated, all efforts at INC 4 would be wasted as the treaty would be diluted and would not tackle the “entire lifecycle of plastics”. It will be limited to downstream measures like the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) – a policy that makes producers responsible for their products, including at the post-consumer stage, and waste management.

Why is India against upstream measures?

For oil and gas majors, the petrochemical industry has become their next big source of revenue due to a fall in demand for fossil fuels resulting from global climate targets and big investments in clean energy. India is eyeing the next phase of its growth through plastic production.

Plastic accounts for more than 60% of total petrochemicals produced in India. The petrochemical industry in India is booming and is expected to contribute to 9% of the country’s GDP. The government even offers subsidies to encourage increased investment, production and export in the plastics sector due to its contribution to the economy.

Satyarupa Shekhar, a public policy advocate against plastic, explained that India has built a massive number of refineries in recent years. With a fall in demand for fossil fuels, this immense refining capacity would go to waste unless production is shifted to plastics.

“Using the refineries to produce petrochemicals that can be exported becomes a lucrative market. The US and Europe get a lot of plastic like coating materials and additives from India,” said Shekhar.

Experts believe that if plastic production is unregulated, all efforts at INC 4 (pictured here) would be wasted as the treaty would be diluted and would not tackle the “entire lifecycle of plastics”. Photo: X/@HlynurGudjons.

Those who agree with India’s stance rationalise that in the event of restrictions on production, India would have to resort to imports to meet its basic needs of plastic consumption, drawing it away from self-sufficiency. So, it was not surprising to them that India was vocal regarding regulations on plastic.

“Elimination or even reduction in plastics trade may impact developing countries and livelihoods associated with it,” the country said.

India argued that the provisions of a global treaty on plastics that regulated upstream measures could conflict with the Marrakesh Agreement. The agreement established that the World Trade Organisation (WTO) would ensure that developing countries secure a share in the growth in international trade.

But similar to India’s argument on plastic polymers, there is a contradiction here, too. The WTO’s informal dialogue on plastic pollution, held in February 2024, recognised the INCs as the leading process to address the entire lifecycle of plastics. About 78 countries participated in the February conference and set out plans to implement 220 trade measures tackling bans on various types of plastics, import licences and quotas on plastic wastes, etc. India did not even take part in the process.

Common but differentiated responsibility (CBDR)

The idea of CBDR was first introduced in the Rio Declaration in 1992 and refers to the differing capabilities and responsibilities of individual countries in addressing climate change. In simpler terms, it means that developed countries have historically caused more environmental degradation and should do more for its mitigation compared to developing countries.

Taking a leaf from CBDR, India and some other larger developing countries (or middle- or upper middle-income countries) invoked “sovereignty”. India’s submission at INC 4 said that “any consideration for phase out or phase down must be nationally driven. It has to take into account the availability, accessibility and affordability of sustainable alternatives.”

Meanwhile, countries from the Africa group, SIDS and EU demanded global measures and mechanisms tackling a wide range of activities in the plastic life cycle.

Hiten Bheda, chairman of the environment committee at the AIPMA, explained that unlike smaller countries, who are mostly consumers of plastic, India is a major producer and consumer. “It is definitely a valid ask to safeguard the self-interest of different countries based on their respective economic position,” he said on behalf of AIPMA.

The United States also supported the idea of countries having their own national action plans because it believed that they would be able to “identify and address sources of plastic pollution in ways that are most suited to their national circumstances”. The country was criticised for its efforts to keep the treaty open, which would have otherwise involved conversations around possible common criteria for all parties to adhere to.

Swati Singh Sambyal, an international circular economy expert, said that this was just a tactic used by countries to have flexibility and not be bound by global targets. She questioned the efficacy, and even need, for a global treaty if every decision on plastics was based on a national scenario.

“In many cases, consideration of national scenarios doesn’t make sense. Many countries do not have any guidelines around EPR. They treat the concept as voluntary. Plastic waste management cannot also be restricted to the nation as it is a transboundary problem,” she said.

But even with the CBDR approach there was no consensus. While some developing countries backed CBDR to get ample time to mobilise resources – for environmentally sound plastic substitutes, legacy plastic waste and its existing emissions – India’s stance included chemicals, polymers and even the design of plastic.

Sanghavi of the AIPMA said that “for [the] sustainable design of plastics, India must assure that they [will] formulate policies where plastics with recyclability/reuse can be produced without restrictions”.

India argued that plastics had been introduced in the country only after developed countries started producing them. Therefore, the task of reducing their use should also begin with the developed nations. Once these technologies become affordable and equipped for adoption on a mass scale, then developing countries can start the process.

Some experts stated that the excessive use of the CBDR approach in the negotiation implied that countries were trying to find loopholes to pollute more. Others believed that the demand for the wealthier countries to shoulder a proportionately greater burden in solving the problem and providing financial and technical support to developing countries was valid.

Also read: As Govt Ban on Single Use Plastics Comes Into Effect, A Look at the Many Challenges in Its Way

Voting mechanism and vague language

Swati Seshadri, director of research and team lead (oil and gas) at the Centre for Financial Accountability (CFA), believed that India’s text negotiation suggested it was making efforts to keep the treaty’s language vague. For instance, India insisted on minuscule changes, such as by suggesting using the phrase “all party” instead of “each party”.

The watering down of text and adding countless bracketed words and sentences – reflecting language that was not yet agreed upon – to lower the ambitions of the treaty was raised as a concern by international environmental organisations as well.

In total, negotiators added all the options they had for inclusion in the revised draft treaty in the form of 3,686 text brackets, which might be impossible to resolve before the scheduled fifth and final session.

In terms of finalising the treaty, India had been emphasising a consensus-based approach instead of voting. Unless each and every member is on board, we risk making the agreement ineffective,” said Naresh Pal Gangwar, joint secretary in the environment ministry, who is representing India at the plenary.

Experts believe that full consensus on the treaty would never be possible and that India was only reiterating this because it knew it would lose if decisions were taken through a three-fourths majority.

There is precedence that the consensus-based approach has been misused in other multilateral environmental agreements where countries with economic interests in producing a pollutant have used veto power to delay the reflection of text in the agreement and thus delayed actions,” Siddharth Ghanshyam Singh, programme manager at the Centre for Science and Environment, told The Wire.

Some believe if there are elements India does not agree with, like the proposals to reduce the production of primary polymers, then India might not sign, leading to a weakened treaty.

“In any case, even if India and some other handful [of] countries continue to produce plastic, it won’t be great for them as they will only have each other to sell to as the rest of the world is becoming environmentally conscious,” said the CFA’s Seshadri.

Despite some progress made in INC 4 regarding the constitution of the Intersessional Working Group, environmentalists are unsatisfied with the negotiations. Environmental organisations like Greenpeace believe that the petro-states have succeeded in diverting all attention to the financial mechanism behind the treaty and the means of implementing the treaty when there is no clarity on what is being implemented through the treaty.

There were fears about fossil fuels lobbyists influencing negotiations as they dominated the event. As per an analysis by the Center for International Environmental Law, nearly 200 fossil fuel and chemical industry lobbyists registered for the negotiations. At least 20 are from India.

Singh said there has been an increasing trend of industry representatives attending INC meetings in the garb of civil society organisations that are ultimately either funded by or affiliated to the petrochemical and plastic industry. In some cases, the industry representatives were a part of member-state delegations, exhibiting serious conflicts of interest.

“I would say it was pseudo-progress. The inability of oil, gas and plastic-producing countries to shift from their perspective is the biggest challenge,” Singh added.

Apart from the petro-states, and nations like India, it was the United States that came in for major criticism for its passive response. It is the biggest architect of plastic expansion and exerts an outsized influence over these international climate negotiations.

Critics argued that though the country was not actively opposing policies that could drive big cuts in plastic production and waste, it was showing “no action or ambition whatsoever”.

There are now high expectations from the upcoming fifth round of negotiations in Busan, in South Korea, to be held from November 25 to December 1 this year. UN Environment Programme officials believe “the work is far from over” as there are only a few months left before the end-of-year deadline.

Sukriti Vats is a writing fellow with Land Conflict Watch, an independent network of researchers that carries out research on land and natural resources.

COP25 Diary: Why the License to Pollute Could Make or Break UN Climate Summit

Carbon markets are at the heart of negotiations at COP25.

Kabir Agarwal from The Wire is in Madrid, Spain, to cover COP25. Follow our coverage of this important event here.

Madrid: People holding up banners and posters with text in all caps greeted delegates as they walked in for day four of negotiations at COP 25. Two of them read ‘NO TO FALSE SOLUTIONS’ and ‘NO TO CARBON MARKETS’.

Carbon markets are at the heart of negotiations at COP25. “It is why we are here,” one negotiator said. If Article 6″ — through which the Paris Agreement deals with carbon markets – “is not resolved, this COP could well be considered a failure.” Carbon Brief, an influential climate policy journal, said that it could “make or break” the Paris Agreement itself, not just this summit.

However, this seems like a bit of a stretch considering it’s possible – if negotiators don’t work out a deal over Article 6 this year – that they could take another shot at next year’s COP, in Glasgow. But one way or another, they will need to work out a deal for sure.

A coalition of civil society groups from around the world had organised the protests to oppose the idea of carbon markets. These are markets in which countries can trade carbon credits, units of value that denote licence to emit greenhouse gases.

Sriram Madhusoodanan, deputy campaigns director at the US-based Corporate Accountability network, said, “It is a mechanism to shift the responsibility of emission reductions on to those who have done nothing to cause the climate crisis.”

Tom Goldtooth, a Native American from Minnesota and a member of the Indigenous Environmental Network, gave an impassioned speech on the subject. Even those simply walking past couldn’t help but pause for a moment.

“Carbon credits are a trading solution,” he began. “It is an idea which has been sold by the capitalists. It does not solve the problem. It will not solve the problem. It is a false solution.” His listeners applauded; some journalists who were nearby even cheered.

The activists also performed a skit in which large corporations were shown urging NGOs and the UN to lobby for a carbon market. The latter then approach two groups – sky and ocean protectors – who reject their advances. Finally, the corporations lose and fall back, and the protectors rejoiced as the UN and NGOs looked on sheepishly.

The drama seems naïve in parts but it’s to the point, as the polite hellos have been done with and the business end of COP25 is about to begin.

Also read: What Was It Like to Be India in 2017 and a Warming World?

Article 6 is the only piece of unfinished business leftover from last year’s COP – the 24th edition, conducted in Katowice, Poland – where the 197 countries party to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change agreed on all the other procedures required to properly implement the Paris Agreement.

Article 6 is contentious because, among other things, there is a chance that the carbon credits system could lead to little or no impact on reducing emissions, and perhaps even provide disincentives for countries to set higher emissions reduction targets.

People protesting carbon markets outside the COP25 venue in Madrid. Photo: Kabir Agarwal

People protesting carbon markets outside the COP25 venue in Madrid. Photo: Kabir Agarwal

Civil society groups have argued that negotiations over Article 6 could in fact amount to a waste of time simply because this article isn’t a viable or meaningful climate action instruments for governments to use. Some of them have even said it is antithetical to the concept of climate justice, which is one of the pillars on which the Paris Agreement stands.

The text of Article 6 tries to stay pertinent by stating that a carbon trading system can exist only alongside a net reduction in emissions. However, it doesn’t say anything about how a government can devise such a joint mechanism, the world’s governments don’t agree on their ideas for a solution, and the more feasible ideas are far from agreeable.

“It will effectively give corporations a license to pay to pollute,” Madhusoodanan said.

And while the Paris Agreement does acknowledge the existence of such perverse incentives, and even recommends a few mitigatory strategies, not many think they will be sufficiently effective.

Under the Kyoto Protocol’s clean development mechanism, countries received emissions reduction certificates (CERs) – colloquially called carbon credit – to reduce emissions. India, China and Brazil have been lobbying hard to ensure their CERs, which together make up 21% of the total, will be transferred to the Paris Agreement regime, scheduled to become operational next year.

On the other hand, developed countries want everyone to start from scratch under the Paris Agreement. They have argued that if the carbon market is flooded with credits from a different era, the new credits could become worthless.

Also read: Gujarat’s Emission Trading Scheme is India’s First Real Battle in War Against Air Pollution

Developing countries don’t agree, for two broad reasons. First, they’re worried this opposing stance could mean any credits they earn in the Paris Agreement regime could be delegitimised by a future agreement. Second, not transferring CERs will be tantamount to not allowing developing countries hold on to the rewards they accrued for doing what needed to be done under the Kyoto Protocol.

These are no easy answers here, especially since the developed nations have most of the world’s dollars, and it’s up to state representatives and negotiators to work out a deal on Article 6 before COP25 ends on December 13.

Kabir Agarwal is in Madrid at the invitation of the Global Editors Network to cover COP25.

COP25 Diary: No Concessions for Latin America in a Latin American Summit

It seems COP25 has come pre-built with tension.

Kabir Agarwal from The Wire is in Madrid, Spain, to cover COP 25. Follow our coverage of this important event here.

Madrid: Another bleak day at COP25 began with another bleak report. Germanwatch, a thinktank from Bonn, said on Wednesday that between 1999 and 2018, about 5 lakh people died around the world due to 12,000+ extreme weather events. India had the third-most deaths in this period, more than Myanmar and fewer than Russia.

Indeed, in 2018 alone, 2,081 people died in India due to natural events – the most in the world. (The toll due to the Kerala floods alone was 483.) Developing countries generally have a higher risk of fatalities in the event of a natural disaster because of their population density, lower quality of public infrastructure and healthcare systems that are unable to deal properly with subsequent epidemics, if any.

In the long term risk index calculated for the period from 1999 to 2018, seven of the top 10 are lower-income or lower-middle-income countries. India is at #17, in this case its large population working in its limited favour (because the number of deaths per lakh people is low).

At the same time, the intensity and increasing unpredictability of weather events hasn’t spared any developed nations either. Germany is one of the most developed countries in the world and the third-most number of people (1,246) died there in 2018 due to natural disasters, in this case dominated by the severe heat-waves in Europe.

Nonetheless, Germanwatch’s findings weren’t at all out of place at COP25, where it’s abundantly clear that the world’s developing countries are facing down the brunt of extreme weather events brought on by anthropogenic global heating, and by being in early stages of development, they have limited ability to deal with such threats.

There are two ways to respond to climate change: mitigation and adaptation. Mitigation involves efforts to cut emissions and reduce the extent of warming. It’s the strategy that dominates the news.

Adaptation, which frequently slips under the radar, has to do with efforts to minimise damage caused by the climate emergency and to prepare for losses that will be incurred in future. For example, according to one estimate, the cost of damages due to natural disasters could be $1.2 trillion (Rs 85.83 lakh crore) a year by 2060. That was nearly Mexico’s GDP in 2018.

The road to mitigation is straightforward º at least since 2015, when the Conference of Parties to the UN FCCC forged the Paris Agreement, and in terms of what we need to do. However, adaptation is becoming more important by the day because most of the world’s governments have thus far been awful with the mitigation part itself. Human activities are emitting more and more greenhouse gases, not less, every year. Scientists have calculated the world’s surface as a result could warm by 3.2º C on average by 2100 – well beyond the threshold for a ‘climate catastrophe’ scenario.

Harjeet Singh, global climate change lead at Action Aid and an expert on climate-related losses, has argued that like the annual emissions gap report, which measures how well the world is reducing emissions relative to targets set in the Paris Agreement, that there needs to be an annual “loss and damage gap report” as well.

“We need to count how many people suffered because of extreme weather events and how many were adequately compensated. We are not here just to count how many solar panels are built. That is just one aspect,” Singh said.

He also criticised the prevailing institutional mechanisms of climate finance, which have to ensure money flows from developed to developing countries to help with mitigation and to offset losses. Article 8 of the Paris Agreement deals with the issue through the Warsaw International Mechanism (WIM). The word ‘compensation’ appears once in the article’s text, only to clarify that the article doesn’t “involve or provide a basis for any liability or compensation”.

“It is quite clear to me that we need to create a system. A new financing facility should be set up here.”

The representatives of developing countries have come prepared to push their counterparts from developed countries hard at COP25. Sources told The Wire that a group of 49 least-developed countries – 33 of which are from Africa – have proposed a separate finance mechanism be set up under the WIM. The African states, which make up one of the five principal regional party groups at the UN, back the pitch. Such unity is arguably non-optional because, to no one’s surprise, developed countries are completely against the idea.

“They are saying what they always say – that we will discuss finance but within the existing institutions,” a negotiator from one of the African nations told The Wire.

A UN committee covered some of this ground on Wednesday, in a dull technical session on “pre-2020 stocktake” to review progress on implementation before the Paris Agreement kicks in next year. Developed countries need to pledge to mobilise $100 billion per year by 2020 for climate action. So far, this green climate fund has received only $10 billion. Alina Averchenkova, a representative of a technical advisory team that works with the UN secretary general, said, “We face significant risk of the target not being met in 2020.”

Developed countries have more negotiating power at the table because of their economic clout. Mostly developing countries need compensation for losses. Developed countries have been very reluctant to cede too many concessions on this front. With climate finance only becoming more important, COP25 has come pre-built with tension. In the first plenary, for example, just before the opening ceremony, Latin American countries had insisted COP25’s agenda include consultations recognising their particular vulnerability to natural disasters and the extent to which developed countries should assume responsibility for this turn of events.

Carolina Schmidt, the president of COP 25 and Chile’s environment minister, had to turn the Latin America group down but not before agreeing to hold similar informal consultations for the group of African nations. The Latin American countries are understandably miffed. According to sources, they met yesterday with Patricia Espinosa, the executive secretary of the UN FCCC, to object. “The Latin American countries are certainly not backing down and you are likely to hear more on this in the coming days,” a member of the Latin America group said.

Later on Wednesday, three women – Schmidt, Espinosa and Lorena Aguilar, the deputy minister of foreign affairs of Costa Rica, which is the co-chair for COP25 – told journalists that the UN understood the Latin Americans’ position, albeit without mentioning what happened at the first plenary.

As soon as they invited questions, an Argentinian reporter asked about the status of Latin America’s request. Schmidt deflected and spoke about how all countries are affected by climate change and that all of them have special needs. Her answer was disappointing not because she was evasive but because it showed just how difficult it is to bend the arc of justice, one way or another, even at a fundamentally Latin American summit with a Chilean president.

Kabir Agarwal is in Madrid at the invitation of the Global Editors Network to cover COP25.

COP25 Diary: After the Point of No Return, Past and Future Collide in Madrid

The next two weeks promise to present a spectacle as negotiators iron out the rules to make the Paris Agreement work – arguably even more riveting than the imminent arrival of Greta Thunberg.

Kabir Agarwal from The Wire is in Madrid, Spain, to cover COP 25. Follow our coverage of this important event here.

Madrid: Humankind is breaking records. But quite unlike the feats we try to preserve for posterity, these records together present a nightmare vision of our planet. For example, the first ten months of 2019 were on average 1.1º C warmer compared to pre-industrial levels, the last five years have quite likely been the five warmest years on record, and this decade is on course to be the warmest on record. In 2019, the world’s oceans experienced their warmest year since the 1950s (only because that’s when we started keeping records) and the amount of ice in the Arctic and the Antarctic regions has dipped to all-time new lows (in the post-industrial era) and the minimum level of ice in the Arctic was the second lowest on record in September 2019.

These were just some of the sobering findings a provisional statement released by the World Meteorological Department included here on Tuesday. The report’s final version will be published in March 2020.

No one at COP 25, the annual UN conference on climate action taking place here, doubts climate change is real or that humans activities are causing it. And no one thinks it’s in the future and not in the now.

After negotiations began on a rather tumultuous note yesterday, as The Wire reported, all eyes are on how far the various participating governments are prepared to go to devise new pathways for the world to cut emissions. Last week, the UN Environment Programme’s emissions gap report said emissions need to fall by 7.6% every year for the world to stay on track to limit average surface warming to 1.5º C above pre-industrial levels – a.k.a. the aspirational target under the Paris Agreement. But on the current emissions pathway, the report said, the world will warm by 3.2º C by 2100 – which is fully 1.2º C above the temperature at which we’re looking at climate catastrophe.

Let’s put this in perspective. The world’s surface has already warmed by 1.1º C. A UN report published last year said a global temperature rise of 1.5º C will have “long lasting and irreversible” impact, including destroying entire ecosystems. Humankind is already precariously close to 1.5º C, and the growth targets of various governments – especially those of India and China – in this century together with trends in energy production and manufacturing suggest our emissions will increase substantially before they peak, and then decline. Scientists and activists on the other hand have been advocating for a decline in emissions that begins now.

This is why there is a sense in Madrid that we’ve passed the point of no return. So the next two weeks present a spectacle of sorts, when negotiators will iron out the mutually agreeable rules and mechanisms to make the Paris Agreement work, before it officially kicks in at the COP26 in Glasgow next year – arguably even more riveting than the imminent arrival of international climate activist Greta Thunberg. Learned observers will maintain a keener eye on how developed countries square their promises of growth, employment and prosperity back home, towards winning impending elections, while remaining true to the principle of ‘common but differentiated responsibility’ (CBDR), a key part of the agreement with tricky electoral value.

CBDR stipulates that while the burden of adapting to and mitigating climate change rests with all countries, the developed countries – primarily those whose emissions have led to the present crisis – have to bear a bigger burden than developing countries.

India has already announced it will take a tough stand on CBDR during its negotiations at COP 25. Ravi Shankar Prasad, the additional secretary of the Union environment minister and India’s chief negotiator, also underscored this point at a side event on Monday. “Equity and common but differentiated responsibility have become buzzwords. Unfortunately, there is a lot of lip service,” he said. “When it comes to operationalisation, there is very little action. It is very important that the spirit of these words permeate.”

There’s bound to be tension on the CBDR front if the tumult at the start of the summit was anything to go by. When Honduras, speaking for Latin America, and Egypt, for Africa, proposed that the COP25 agenda should include discussions on how and how much the group of developed will compensate developing countries for losses incurred due to adverse climatic events, they faced stiff resistance from the US, the UK and others.

Policymakers and negotiators representing developing countries at COP25 believe such compensation would redress what is fundamentally a historic injustice, but the Indian delegation could also work itself into a hypocritical spot as a result. For at COP25, a group of climate justice activists from several groups, led by Friends of the Earth International, commemorated the 35th anniversary of the Bhopal gas tragedy.

On the night of December 2, 1984, methyl isocyanate gas leaked from a Union Carbide pesticide plant in Bhopal and affected over six lakh people overnight, especially those without proper shelter. An estimated 20,000+ people died, including 10,000 within three days of the leak and many others due to the toxin’s mutagenic and teratogenic effects. Several thousands were disabled. Successive governments spanning the ideological spectrum have let all of the company’s senior officials escape criminal prosecution or punishment.

The activists gathered outside the COP25 venue with pictures of the tragedy and a banner that read “No more Bhopals”. “This disaster and its aftermath shows corporate impunity at its worst,” Dipti Bhatnagar, a climate justice and energy programme coordinator at Friends of the Earth International. “We are here at COP25 to demand climate justice, environmental and social justice, and we also stand in solidarity with those affected by corporate crimes.”

If the Indian contingent was perturbed, it didn’t show. Outside the negotiating rink, it was focused on its pavilion celebrating ‘150 years of the Mahatma’, with numerous touch-screen monitors above a polished black floor outlining India’s efforts to grow sustainably and without disrupting the environment. The screens flashed updates from the national the government’s Swachch Bharat campaign, Smart Cities initiative and the National Clean Air Programme – leaving out the fact that all these programmes have been flops to mixed-successes back home.

At the back of the pavilion, the contingent has attempted to recreate the Sabarmati Ashram with a red floor, white curtains, and silhouettes depicting Gandhi using a broom, washing the floor, watering plants, etc. There are also models of Gandhi’s iconic spinning wheel, or the charkha, of different sizes. (This rustic image stands in stark contrast to the government’s plan to make the original ashram in Ahmedabad “world-class”, and the implications have left its residents troubled.) A member of the delegation used one charkha during the opening ceremony to spin “sustainable yarn” – as if to suggest the world needs to adopt Gandhi’s model of sustainable living and cut consumption.

Whether this message will be part of a mega-strike that Thunberg is expected to lead on Friday remains to be seen. The Swedish teenager reached Lisbon, Portugal, on Tuesday after a 21-day trip across the Atlantic Ocean on a catamaran. In September, she had taken a similar boat-ride from Europe to North America, where her plan was to first attend the UN climate action summit in New York, then travel around North America before finally making her way to Chile for COP25. Her plans had to be changed after Chile passed the hosting baton to Spain after local unrest. She apparently hitched a ride with an Australian family travelling the world in their boat since 2014.

Thunberg’s presence is bound to set COP25 atwitter. But between her fiery rhetoric, the contentious push-and-pull of negotiations and the ominous records the world’s climate is set on achieving, it’s not clear if COP25’s outcomes will simply achieve what the majority of countries think they need to be seen to achieve – or if they will produce an agreement that truly commits to reducing humankind’s industrial footprint and switch to models of growth that don’t further disprivilege the most underprivileged.

Kabir Agarwal is in Madrid at the invitation of the Global Editors Network to cover COP25.

Note: This article originally stated that India’s chief negotiator at COP25 was a Union minister. He is actually an additional secretary. The mistake was correct at 12:08 am on December 4, 2019.

‘How Dare You’: Greta Thunberg Denounces World Leaders At UN Climate Summit

Inspired by Thunberg’s solitary weekly protest outside the Swedish parliament a year ago, millions poured onto the streets around the globe last Friday to demand governments attending the summit take emergency action.

United Nations: Teenage activist Greta Thunberg angrily denounced world leaders on Monday for failing to tackle climate change, unleashing the outrage felt by millions of her peers in the heart of the United Nations by demanding: “How dare you?”

The Swedish campaigner’s brief address electrified the start of a summit aimed at mobilising government and business to break international paralysis over carbon emissions, which hit record highs last year despite decades of warnings from scientists.

“This is all wrong. I shouldn’t be up here. I should be back in school on the other side of the ocean yet you all come to us young people for hope. How dare you?” said Thunberg, 16, her voice quavering with emotion.

“You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words,” she said.

Inspired by Thunberg’s solitary weekly protest outside the Swedish parliament a year ago, millions of young people poured onto the streets around the globe last Friday to demand governments attending the summit take emergency action.

“I was very struck by the emotion in the room when some of the young people spoke earlier,” French President Emmanuel Macron told the UN Climate Action Summit. “I also want to play my role in listening to them. I think that no political decision maker can remain deaf to this call for justice between generations.”

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who organised the one-day event to boost the 2015 Paris Agreement to combat global warming, had warned leaders only to turn up if they came armed with concrete action plans, not empty speeches.

Also read: At UN Climate Summit, Green Funds, Collective Commitment in Focus

“Nature is angry. And we fool ourselves if we think we can fool nature, because nature always strikes back, and around the world nature is striking back with fury,” said Guterres, a former Portuguese prime minister.

“There is a cost to everything. But the biggest cost is doing nothing. The biggest cost is subsidising a dying fossil fuel industry, building more and more coal plants, and denying what is plain as day: that we are in a deep climate hole, and to get out we must first stop digging,” he said.

Nevertheless, there were few new proposals from governments for the kind of rapid change climate scientists say is now needed to avert devastating impacts from warming. The summit has, by contrast, been marked by a flurry of pledges from business, pension funds, insurers and banks to do more.

“We have broken the cycle of life,” said Emmanuel Faber, chief executive of French food group Danone, who announced a “One Planet” initiative with a group of 19 major food companies to transition towards more sustainable farming.

“We need your support for shifting agricultural subsidies from killing life into supporting biodiversity,” Faber said.

Trump appears

US President Donald Trump, who questions climate science and has challenged every major US regulation aimed at combating climate change, made a brief appearance in the audience of the summit along with Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. He did not speak but he listened to remarks by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who serves as a UN special envoy on climate action, called out Trump’s low-key appearance before he spoke on Monday: “Hopefully our deliberations will be helpful to you as you formulate climate policy,” he said to audience laughter.

Merkel announced Germany would double its contribution to a UN fund to support less developed countries to combat climate change to four billion euros from 2 billion euros.

Among the day’s other initial announcements was one from the Marshall Islands, whose president Hilda Heine said she would seek parliamentary approval to declare a climate crisis on the low-lying atoll, already grappling with sea level rise.

Heine said her country and New Zealand, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and others who form the “High Ambition” bloc at U.N. climate negotiations, will commit to achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

With climate impacts such as extreme weather, thawing permafrost and sea-level rise unfolding much faster than expected, scientists say the urgency of the crisis has intensified since the Paris accord was agreed.

The agreement will enter a crucial implementation phase next year after another round of negotiations in Chile in December.

Existing pledges to curb emissions are nowhere near enough to avert catastrophic warming, say scientists, who warn that failing to change course could ultimately put the survival of industrial societies at risk.

Laurence Tubiana, a former French diplomat and an architect of the Paris accord, said she drew some comfort from more ambitious pledges by a nucleus of political and business leaders.

“When you look at the emergency and you see the level of the response, of course I cannot be happy,” Tubiana told reporters. “The golden nugget I see is this group of countries, companies and cities.”

Also read: Modi Steers Clear of Making Time-Bound Commitments at UN Climate Summit

Over the past year, Guterres has called for no new coal plants to be built after 2020, urged a phase-out of fossil fuel subsidies and asked countries to map out how to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

While some countries have made progress, some of the biggest emitting countries remain far behind, even as wildfires, heat waves and record temperatures have provided glimpses of the devastation that could lie in store in a warmer world.

In a measure of the gap between government action and the ever-louder alarms sounded by climate scientists, the United Nations Development Programme said that 14 nations representing a quarter of global emissions have signalled that they do not intend to revise current climate plans by 2020.

Pope Francis, in a message broadcast to the conference, called for honesty, responsibility and courage to face “one of the most serious and worrying phenomena of our time”.

(Reuters)

At UN Climate Summit, Green Funds, Collective Commitment in Focus

Sticky issues such as delivering on the $100 billion Green Climate Fund are also likely to be discussed at the forum.

New Delhi: On September 23, when the world meets at the UN Climate Summit in New York, world leaders will speak about their commitment to preventing dangerous climate change impacts by keeping global temperature rise under two degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels.

At the same time, sticky issues such as delivering on the $100 billion Green Climate Fund and the principle of common but differentiated responsibility (CBDR) based on the different capabilities of economies are likely to be discussed at the forum.

Days ahead of the summit, called by UN secretary general Antonio Guterres to urge nations to enhance their ambitions to meet targets, India’s environment secretary C.K. Mishra said the group of like-minded developing countries (LMDCs), G-77 developing nations and Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) are likely to underline the CBDR principle, or the principle of equity at the summit.

India, which is on target to achieve its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) – efforts by each country to reduce national emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change – is unlikely to make any enhancement to commitment at the 2015 Paris Agreement.

Interview: ‘We’re Finally Talking About Solutions on the Scale of the Crisis We Face’: Naomi Klein

“We are among only five countries [along with Ethiopia, the Philippines, Costa Rica and Morocco as per climateactiontracker.org] whose NDCs are on track to achieve the two-degree target. We are already doing what is supposed to be done. The $100 billion promise is far from being fulfilled. Like-minded country groups will raise these issues,” Mishra said.

In 2010, developed countries had agreed to mobilise $100 billion per year by 2020. Only about 10.8 billion dollars has been committed till this year.

No negotiations at the summit

There will be no negotiations at the summit, which will later take place in Chile in December at the 25th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). But with extreme weather events staring in the face, activists and experts are hoping that world leaders, particularly those who are not in line to meet the 2-degree target, will at least express their intention to meet it and have a strategy on how industry can switch to a low-carbon trajectory.

India, along with Sweden, will make a presentation on transforming the industry sector to meet the 1.5-degree target of global warming. “Our presentation will be on making steel, aluminium, chemicals, cement etc. on switching from grey to green,” Mishra added. PM Narendra Modi will make a statement on India’s plans and role also.

“My understanding is that the summit is not a replacement for the negotiations under the UNFCCC. The Entire world should recognise it and not push countries like India in a defensive space. The UN Summit is an opportunity to discuss the scale of the problem and climate emergency,” said Sunita Narain, director general of Centre for Science and Environment (CSE).

The US, Russian Federation and Saudi Arabia are critically insufficient when it comes to achieving the two-degree Celsius target, according to climateactiontracker.org.

“The UN Climate Action Summit is a great opportunity to showcase global ambition which is what is needed to move to a below-two-degree Celsius world. The world should focus on strategies to make decarbonisation of various sectors profitable in the long term thus access to technology and adequate and reliable finance will continue to be pertinent concerns,” said Karan Mangotra, associate director and climate specialist at The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI).

an important aspect of knowing the sources of pollution is emissions monitoring and making that information available in real-time for further analysis. Credit: JuniperPhoton/Unsplash

The focus should be on strategies to make decarbonisation of various sectors profitable in the long term, experts say. Credit: JuniperPhoton/Unsplash

Role of developed countries

India and France’s joint statement during PM Modi’s visit to France in August also urged all developed countries to scale up their contributions to Green Climate Fund in its first replenishment cycle in line with their commitments and raised the issue of equity.

“The dirty fossil fuel party is over; we now have to clean up the mess. Whoever caused the biggest mess has the most responsibility. Millions of people are already experiencing the devastating effects of extreme weather, rising sea levels and hunger. Climate justice means that rich polluting countries must own up to their responsibility for causing the crisis. They also need to deliver on their promise to provide $100 billion per year of climate finance to help developing countries cope with impacts and green their economies,” said Harjeet Singh, global lead on climate change for ActionAid.

Also Read: UN Secretary General Urges Public Pressure to Address the Climate ‘Emergency’

The Climate Action Summit will take place in the backdrop of World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) declaring that June and July were the hottest months globally in 2019, and the 2015-2019 period was the hottest on record. India saw erratic monsoons this year with floods and droughts being experienced in the same states in Kerala and Maharashtra, the forest fires in the Amazon caught the attention of the world and are likely to be discussed at the summit. Current INDCs will lead to a warming of 3.4 degrees over pre-industrial levels by the end of the century. This, according to climateactiontracker.com, because the INDCs are not ambitious enough.

This story originally appeared in Hindustan Times. It is republished here as part of The Wire‘s partnership with Covering Climate Now, a global collaboration of more than 250 news outlets to strengthen coverage of the climate story.