Rocky start at COP29 climate talks – CSOs hold firm on human rights, finance and climate justice

Google+ Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr +
  • The 29th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC COP29) has opened amid deep divisions over agenda items, fossil fuel lobbying by the host nation, and new carbon market rules that threaten to derail urgent climate action.
  • Critical issues such as climate finance, just transitions, human rights, and the protection of Indigenous land and environmental defenders are already at risk.

Ironically themed โ€œIn Solidarity for a Green Worldโ€, COP29 is hosted by a petrostate with a troubling human rights record, highlighting the urgent need for the UNFCCC Secretariat to address conflicts of interest and ensure host nations respect fundamental civic and political rights. These rights are indispensable for achieving meaningful climate justice.

COP29 continues against the backdrop of a fossil fuel driven genocide in Palestine and war in Lebanon, with developed countries spending billions of US dollars on military aid on wars and funding an apartheid regime, rather than fulfilling their financial obligations under the Paris Accords. On day one at the conference, civil society groups mobilized in the corridors of COP29, demanding an end to fossil fuels and genocide.

In October, the UNEP released its Emissions Gap Report, confirming global temperatures are still projected to rise by 2.6ยฐC by the end of the century, likely to push the planet beyond irreversible tipping points, threatening biodiversity, humanity and life as we know it. The failure to limit the temperature rise to 1.5ยฐC is largely due to lacking financial support from developed countries, who are historically most responsible for the climate crisis.

Without finance for developing nations, the worldโ€™s most vulnerable communities are unable to mitigate, adapt to climate change and rebuild from loss and damage.

At COP29, the primary fight will be for parties to agree on a new and ambitious climate finance goal, essential to achieving a fair and adequate response to the climate crisis.ย  The New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) is a critical opportunity for developed countries to fulfil legal and moral obligations under the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement to provide the means for implementation, enabling developing nations to phase out fossil fuels, mitigate climate change and adapt to the disproportionate impacts of climate change borne by the global south.

Linked to the need for climate finance and a fossil fuel phase out, is the need to resist false solutions and dangerous distractions like carbon markets, offsets and geoengineering being punted by companies and parties, especially in the global north, intent on profiting from the crisis and continuing business as usual.

Parties should reject the reliance and use of carbon market mechanisms, and if states continue to use and rely on them, it is critical that they are using rules that will prevent fraud as well as violations of human rights and the rights of Indigenous Peoples. Furthermore, parties should be guided by the recent COP16 reiteration of the moratorium on unproven geoengineering tech fixes (solar radiation modification) and ensure these be discussed within the bounds of existing and binding international Human Rights law obligations.

Natural Justice is in Baku for the entirety of the conference and will be observing negotiations related to the important role of women and Indigenous Peoples in achieving climate justice.ย In alliance with civil society organizations NJ will be advocating for the inclusion of language on equity, a human rights-based approach climate action, a just energy transition and grant-based climate finance, with a specific focus on the urgent need for state parties to respect, protect and fulfill the rights of environmental and land defenders who are increasingly facing reprisals for their important activism in safeguarding the climate and environmental democracy.ย ย 

โ€œThis year African leaders must work solidarity to transition away from fossil fuels and centering human rights. They should push developed states for an ambitious finance goal that ensures Africa can address loss and damage and urgently fund adaptation to the climate crisis. African negotiators must ensure the NCQG is commensurate with the crisis and grants-based, avoiding further debt and poverty on our continentโ€ saidย Sokhna Die Ka, Natural Justice, West African Hub Director.

โ€œFrom this COP, we need practical solutions meeting the needs of Africans through a human rights and justice centered energy transition. Communities and Indigenous People in Africa have already paid the price of fossil fuel driven global economy. There needs to be a recognition of the inequality in energy consumption and energy poverty suffered by Africa. No more loans placing Africa into further debt. It is time for polluters, those who have benefited from the unjustย energyย system, to pay up.โ€ saidย Lauren Nel, Natural Justice, Coordinator for Just Energy Transitions Africa (JETA).

Source: Natural Justice

Disclaimer: The articles and videos expressed in this publication are those of the authors. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of Green Building Africa, our staff or our advertisers. The designations employed in this publication and the presentation of material therein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part Green Building Africa concerning the legal status of any country, area or territory or of its authorities.

Share.

Leave A Reply

About Author

Green Building Africa promotes the need for net carbon zero buildings and cities in Africa. We are fiercely independent and encourage outlying thinkers to contribute to the #netcarbonzero movement. Climate change is upon us and now is the time to react in a more diverse and broader approach to sustainability in the built environment. We challenge architects, property developers, urban planners, renewable energy professionals and green building specialists. We also challenge the funding houses and regulators and the role they play in facilitating investment into green projects. Lastly, we explore and investigate new technology and real-time data to speed up the journey in realising a net carbon zero environment for our children.

Copyright Green Building Africa 2024.