The global climate summit has gone into overtime with no deal on the meeting’s final agreement, and countries are bitterly divided over whether to call time on fossil fuels.
Instead, the watered-down draft offers a list of actions that countries “could” take to reduce their planet-heating emissions, one of which is reducing the consumption and production of oil, coal and gas.
An ambitious deadline set by COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber to strike a deal on a package of agreements expired earlier yesterday, the last day of the summit, and by 6pm in Dubai (midnight Wednesday AEDT) the summit was officially past deadline.
The annual climate talks often run over, but COP28 has been particularly fraught, with criticism that oil interests have derailed the process.
He has consistently rejected criticisms of a conflict of interest and pledged to hold a transparent process.
Saudi Arabia and Iraq were among the countries that did not want reference to a phase-out of fossil fuels in the text, Catherine Abreu, the founder and executive director of the nonprofit group Destination Zero, told reporters in Dubai.
Kuwait’s state news agency KUNA said the country’s delegation to COP28 was “reaffirming” its rejection of a phase-out as well.
Climate advocate and former US Vice President Al Gore warned in a post on X Monday that the summit was “on the verge of complete failure”, pointing specifically to OPEC as part of the problem.
“The world desperately needs to phase out fossil fuels as quickly as possible, but this obsequious draft reads as if OPEC dictated it word for word,” Gore said.
“It is even worse than many had feared.”
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COP28 hosts defend watered-down draft
The COP28 presidency fended of criticism over the draft yesterday, saying it supported a “historic” deal that included some language on fossil fuels and aimed for “the highest ambition”.
“We are facing the most demanding COP agenda of all time,” said COP28 director-general ambassador Majid al-Suwaidi in a news conference.
“The text we released was a starting point for discussions,” he said, adding that the presidency did not show favouritism to any party.
The EU delegation yesterday met with its allies in the High Ambition Coalition, which includes several island states, to try to align their next moves. They also held a discussion with UN Secretary General António Guterres.
EU Climate Action Commissioner Wopke Hoekstra told reporters after the meeting that there was “a supermajority” of countries at COP28 that wanted more ambition in the deal to ensure global warming doesn’t exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial level, a critical threshold for the planet.
“We need to keep a 1.5 degree figure alive. It is what science demands and our kids deserve,” Hoekstra wrote in a post on X, along with a photo of him meeting with the High Ambition Coalition.
Change Minister Chris Bowen has said the so-called Umbrella Group of countries — which includes Australia, the US, UK, Canada and Norway — would not sign the draft as it stands.
The UK would not confirm that position to CNN, though a government spokesperson said Monday that the country’s position was clear, “there must be a phase out of unabated fossil fuels to meet our climate goals”.
“The UK is working with all parties and will continue to push for an ambitious outcome at COP28 that keeps 1.5 degrees in reach,” the spokesperson said.