The meeting of 40 countries is one of several ahead of the United Nations’ COP climate summit hosted by the United Arab Emirates at the end of the year. The European Union and others have lobbied for countries to agree at the annual talks that they should phase out the use of oil and gas — language that failed to make it to the final communiqué from last year’s COP27 meeting. The UAE’s environment minister, Mariam Almheiri, earlier this year tested a pitch to “phase out oil and gas in a just way.”
Al Jaber said the UAE “will encourage smart government regulation to jump start the hydrogen value chain and make carbon capture commercially viable.” While the technologies are needed to mitigate emissions from hard-to-abate sectors, their deployment globally is currently far from the scale required to cut emissions quickly enough to avoid the worst impacts of global warming.
The UAE’s presidency of COP has come under criticism from green groups, even as Al Jaber has said that the global climate goals are “non-negotiable.” That’s because under Al Jaber’s leadership, Adnoc is looking to expand oil and gas production, although climate scientists are clear that new fossil-fuel infrastructure will ensure the world blows past temperature targets set under the Paris Agreement in 2015.
Al Jaber also called on rich nations to finally deliver on their promise made more than a decade ago to raise $100 billion to help developing countries cut emissions and adapt to climate change. Germany’s Foreign Minister, Annalena Baerbock, said that developed nations are on their way to reaching the goal this year.
“But it is absolutely clear that this is not enough,” Baerbock said. “We need to mobilize several trillion.” That would require raising large amounts of private capital, additional funds from the International Monetary Fund, as well as a restructuring of developing countries’ debts, she said.
Europe’s largest economy is still behind on its own pledge to give €6 billion annually by 2025. Germany and the US — whose climate envoy John Kerry is at the talks that will run until Wednesday — also want to make climate financing a fixed part of the World Bank’s business model to allow for more green investments, Baerbock added.
And the call for more funds will continue to grow. At COP27 in Egypt, nearly 200 countries signed off on creating a new fund to compensate countries for some of the damages caused by extreme weather events. How the fund will operate and who will contribute money toward it will be a focus of the climate conference in Dubai.
COP28 will also see the results of a global stocktake of where countries stand on meeting climate goals, and it is already clear that most of them are not on track. With limits on emissions not working to plan, Baerbock says she’s open to debating whether COP28 should set new goals on renewable-energy buildout.
“I am committed to ensuring that we also agree on a global target for renewable energies and energy efficiency,” she said. “Our ambition for the COP in Dubai must be to herald the end of the age of fossil energies.”
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