COP26: Document leak reveals nations lobbying to change key climate report
Image credit: Yahoonews |
A huge leak of documents seen by BBC News shows how
countries are trying to change a crucial scientific report on how to tackle
climate change.
The leak reveals Saudi Arabia, Japan and Australia are among
countries asking the UN to play down the need to move rapidly away from fossil
fuels.
It also shows some wealthy nations are questioning paying
more to poorer states to move to greener technologies.
This "lobbying" raises questions for the COP26
climate summit in November.
It shows countries pushing back on UN recommendations for
action just days before they will be asked to make significant commitments to
slow down climate change and keep global warming to 1.5 degrees.
The leaked documents consist of more than 32,000 submissions
made by governments, companies and other interested parties to the team of
scientists compiling a UN report designed to bring together the best scientific
evidence on how to tackle climate change.
These "assessment reports" are produced every six
to seven years by the the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the
UN body tasked with evaluating the science of climate change,
The report will be used by governments to decide what action
is needed to tackle climate change and will be a crucial input to negotiations
at the Glasgow conference.
The authority of these reports derives in part from the fact
that virtually all the governments of the world participate in the process to
reach consensus.
The comments from governments the BBC has read are
overwhelmingly designed to be constructive and to improve the quality of the
final report.
The cache of comments and the latest draft of the report
were released to Greenpeace UK's team of investigative journalists, Unearthed,
which passed it on to BBC News.
Fossil fuels
The leak shows a number of countries and organisations
arguing that the world does not need to reduce the use of fossil fuels as
quickly as the current draft of the report recommends.
An adviser to the Saudi oil ministry demands "phrases
like 'the need for urgent and accelerated mitigation actions at all scales…'
should be eliminated from the report".
One senior Australian government official rejects the conclusion that closing coal-fired power plants is necessary, even though ending the use of coal is one of the stated objectives the COP26 conference.
Saudi Arabia is the one of the largest oil producers in the
world and Australia is a major coal exporter.
A senior scientist from India's Central Institute of Mining
and Fuel Research, which has strong links to the Indian government, warns coal
is likely to remain the mainstay of energy production for decades because of
what they describe as the "tremendous challenges" of providing
affordable electricity. India is already the world's second biggest consumer of
coal.
A number of countries argue in favour of emerging and
currently expensive technologies designed to capture and permanently store
carbon dioxide underground. Saudi Arabia, China, Australia and Japan - all big
producers or users of fossil fuels - as well as the organisation of oil
producing nations, Opec, all support carbon capture and storage (CCS).
It is claimed these CCS technologies could dramatically cut
fossil fuel emissions from power plants and some industrial sectors.
Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, requests the
UN scientists delete their conclusion that "the focus of decarbonisation
efforts in the energy systems sector needs to be on rapidly shifting to
zero-carbon sources and actively phasing out fossil fuels".
Argentina, Norway and Opec also take issue with the
statement. Norway argues the UN scientists should allow the possibility of CCS
as a potential tool for reducing emissions from fossil fuels.
The draft report accepts CCS could play a role in the future
but says there are uncertainties about its feasibility. It says "there is
large ambiguity in the extent to which fossil fuels with CCS would be
compatible with the 2C and 1.5C targets" as set out by the Paris
Agreement.
Australia asks IPCC scientists to delete a reference to
analysis of the role played by fossil fuel lobbyists in watering down action on
climate in Australia and the US. Opec also asks the IPCC to "delete 'lobby
activism, protecting rent extracting business models, prevent political
action'."
When approached about its comments to the draft report, Opec
told the BBC: "The challenge of tackling emissions has many paths, as
evidenced by the IPCC report, and we need to explore them all. We need to
utilise all available energies, as well as clean and more efficient
technological solutions to help reduce emissions, ensuring no one is left
behind."
Impartial science
The IPCC says comments from governments are central to its
scientific review process and that its authors have no obligation to
incorporate them into the reports.
"Our processes are designed to guard against lobbying -
from all quarters", the IPCC told the BBC. "The review process is
(and always has been) absolutely fundamental to the IPCC's work and is a major
source of the strength and credibility of our reports.
Professor Corinne le Quéré of the University of East Anglia,
a leading climate scientist who has helped compile three major reports for the
IPCC, has no doubts about the impartiality of the IPCC's reports.
She says all comments are judged solely on scientific
evidence regardless of where they come from.
"There is absolutely no pressure on scientists to
accept the comments," she told the BBC. "If the comments are
lobbying, if they're not justified by the science, they will not be integrated
in the IPCC reports."
She says it is important that experts of all kinds -
including governments - have a chance to review the science.
"The more the reports are scrutinised", says
Professor le Quéré, "the more solid the evidence is going to be in the
end, because the more the arguments are brought and articulated forward in a
way that is leaning on the best available science".
Christiana Figueres, the Costa Rican diplomat who oversaw
the landmark UN climate conference in Paris in 2015, agrees it is crucial that
governments are part of the IPCC process.
"Everybody's voice has to be there. That's the whole
purpose. This is not a single thread. This is a tapestry woven by many, many
threads."
The United Nations was awarded a Nobel Prize in 2007 for the
IPCC's work on climate science and the crucial role it has played in the effort
to tackle climate change.
Eating less meat
Brazil and Argentina, two of the biggest producers of beef
products and animal feed crops in the world, argue strongly against evidence in
the draft report that reducing meat consumption is necessary to cut greenhouse
gas emissions.
Chart: A quarter of global greenhouse gas emissions come
from food
The draft report states "plant-based diets can reduce
greenhouse gas emissions by up to 50% compared to the average emission
intensive Western diet". Brazil says this is incorrect.
Both countries call on the authors to delete or change some
passages in the text referring to "plant-based diets" playing a role
in tackling climate change, or which describe beef as a "high carbon"
food. Argentina also asked that references to taxes on red meat and to the
international "Meatless Monday" campaign, which urges people to forgo
meat for a day, be removed from the report.
The South American nation recommends "avoiding generalisation on the impacts of meat-based diets on low carbon options", arguing there is evidence that meat-based diets can also reduce carbon emissions.
On the same theme, Brazil says "plant-based diets do
not for themselves guarantee the reduction or control of related
emissions" and maintains the focus of debate should be on the levels of
emissions from different production systems, rather than types of food.
Brazil, which has seen significant increases in the rate of
deforestation in the Amazon and some other forest areas, also disputes a
reference to this being a result of changes in government regulations, claiming
this is incorrect.
Money for poorer countries
A significant number of Switzerland's comments are directed
at amending parts of the report that argue developing countries will need support,
particularly financial support, from rich countries in order to meet emission
reduction targets.
It was agreed at the climate conference in Copenhagen in
2009 that developed nations would provide $100bn a year in climate finance for
developing countries by 2020, a target that has yet to be met.
Chart showing climate finance provided to developing countries
Australia makes a similar case to Switzerland. It says
developing countries' climate pledges do not all depend on receiving outside
financial support. It also describes a mention in the draft report of the lack
of credible public commitments on finance as "subjective commentary".
The Swiss Federal Office for the Environment told the BBC:
"While climate finance is a critical tool to increase climate ambition, it
is not the only relevant tool.
"Switzerland takes the view that all Parties to the
Paris Agreement with the capacity to do so should provide support to those who
need such support."
Going nuclear
A number of mostly Eastern European countries argue the
draft report should be more positive about the role nuclear power can play in
meeting the UN's climate targets.
India goes even further, arguing "almost all the
chapters contain a bias against nuclear energy". It argues it is an
"established technology" with "good political backing except in
a few countries".
The Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia criticise a table in
the report which finds nuclear power only has a positive role in delivering one
of 17 UN Sustainable Development goals. They argue it can play a positive role
in delivering most of the UN's development agenda.
Except the Header Image this story has not been edited by Blueplanet staff
Source BBC
No comments