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G20 meeting: India defended climate change red lines

November 23, 2015 13:32 IST

G20Developed countries wanted to pre-decide the contours of the Paris climate change agreement, which would have hurt India’s interests

At a recently concluded talks of G20 countries, India prevented an attempt to pre-decide the contours of the Paris climate change agreement outside the formal United Nations climate convention negotiations, to start on November 30.

The proposals from the developed countries at the G20 meet to include a joint communique, which the 20 heads of states were to sign, would have breached Indian interests.

The diplomatic tug of war with the developed countries in the meeting at Antalya, Turkey, on November 16 delayed the final communique by the heads of states for hours.

India was represented by the National Institution for Transforming India Aayog Chairperson Arvind Panagariya as the Sherpa for Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the G20 talks.

“It was surely a very tough and long-drawn negotiation,” said an Indian negotiator.

The developed countries pushed for inclusion of three contentious issues in the communique, which have been difficult to resolve at the UN negotiations, and wanted to keep a reference to the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities out.

An Indian official said: “We have always been opposed to plurilateral forums, such as G20, dictating terms to the rest of the world when all countries are engaged to deliver at the Paris meet.

"That is the right forum, where all countries get an equal voice.”

The decisions at a G20 meet are not added to the formal UN climate negotiations.

But these hold great weight because some economically and politically powerful countries are members of the club. An endorsement of ideas at G20 often becomes difficult to fight off at the formal UN talks.

“The first draft of the communique did not have any contentious ideas but then these were introduced, which got us worried,” said one official. Business Standard reviewed the draft communique independently too.

A reference was brought in to endorse a recent  Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development report on climate finance, which said developed countries would deliver the promised $100 billion annually by 2020.

As many as 134 developing countries in the G77+China group had criticised the report for counting unrelated funds as part of climate financing.

“How could we let that report be endorsed through the G20 . . . when all of us acknowledge there are many problems with it?” said the official.

At the Turkey meeting, developed countries demanded the G20 endorse a mechanism to review and ratchet up the climate targets of the countries under the Paris agreement.

Countries have largely agreed to a periodic review of the targets as a collective.

But large differences persisted over how countries would revise their targets periodically.

The Paris meet would settle the targets, which for now were determined at the national level and not the international level.

Developed countries raised only the issue of emission reduction targets but had no such review of their commitment to deliver finance and technology.

Developing countries such as India wanted the wall of differentiation to continue in the review process, while keeping alive the linkage between their actions and the commitments of the rich countries to deliver finance and clean technology.

Another contentious issue brought to the table by the developed countries at the G20 meeting was a reference to what the long-term goal of the Paris agreement should be.

At the UN negotiations last year in Lima, It was agreed the goal would be to keep global temperature rise in check below two degrees Celsius by the turn of the century.

The developed countries recently proposed new terms, which were introduced in to the G20 communique as well, sources said.

While the terms were not clearly defined, the developed countries were keen to get these in to the Paris agreement. Countries such as India opposed these, saying these do not retain the differentiation between the responsibility of the developed world and the poor. At the same time, these restricted growth of emerging economies, which depend more on coal.

India was able to ultimately prevail at the G20 talks and bring back the reference to the two-degrees Celsius goal that all countries have agreed to.

It was able to also force back the reference to the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities -- the bedrock of the UN convention on climate change that developed countries are keen to weaken through the Paris agreement.

On India’s insistence, along with some other developing countries, the G20 communique also ultimately said: “We reaffirm that the UNFCCC is the primary international intergovernmental body for negotiating climate change.”

Nitin Sethi in New Delhi
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