Australian Targets
▼
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
Egypt wins Fossil Award for being dead set on no-ambition strategy in Talanoa
Well today's Fossil Award came from the leftfield.
But on some days the least expected step up to be the worst, who does the most to be the least, and who tries their hardest to make sure we don't get fair justice and a binding climate deal.
Egypt, the land of the pyramids, this day is yours for Fossil of the Day, for being dead set against ambition in Talanoa.
Here be the award commendation for today:
We should really talk about that thing. You know, the crisis facing the planet?
It’s important, right? We’ve talked about it a lot already.
Maybe we think so, but there seem to be some who don’t ...
Parties agreed at COP23 that the Talanoa Dialogue would be designed to enhance ambition. However, that spirit seemed to have escaped some parties in their interventions in the Talanoa Dialogue events today. There was perhaps no party that seemed so dead set against ambition in Talanoa, than Egypt.
Despite the IPCC findings that current Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) put us on track to 3 degrees or more, and the call for urgently scaled up action and targets from the Pre-2020 high level event, Egypt made it clear they had no interest in discussing more ambitious NDCs before 2020.
Even more, they doubled down on their no-ambition strategy, saying there should be no negotiated outcome of Talanoa.
Perhaps it has escaped them that we are here at the “climate negotiations” discussing the defining issue of the 21st Century – the shortage of ambition – past, present and future, to address climate change.
We need outcomes that commit countries to scale up climate efforts in the pre-2020 AND post-2020 period, not more ducking and weaving to dodge discussion of ambition!
No doubt Egypt is torn between its loyalties to the oil-dominated Arab Group and solidarity with its fellow members of the African Group, many of whom are LDCs and extremely vulnerable to climatic disruptions. But dodging ambition, in any time period, does a disservice to both.
Watch the Livestream from Facebook:
and visit the Climate Action Network Fossil of the Day webpage and Facebook page.
No comments:
Post a Comment