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COP 17 - Success or disappointment PDF Print E-mail

By Tony Frost

16 December 2011

They came to Durban in their hundreds, they saw, they talked, and talked, and talked, and talked.  But the question, is did they really conquer?  Not withstanding the extra day and half and the much heralded agreement.

What were the successes of the Durban Platform, as the agreement has been dubbed?

The big success is that Durban pulled together all the key role players who were forced to exercise their minds and focus on the biggest threat ever faced by humankind. Paul Stockton, US Assistant Secretary for Defence, the man charged with securing the country from cataclysmic disasters, including terrorism such as the 09/11 attack, has absolutely no doubt about this and is preparing his nation’s disaster management specialists for attacks much bigger than anything they have ever yet experienced.  He is sure these attacks will mostly come from Mother Nature. If he wasn’t in Durban he should have been.

It seems, looking in from the outside, that while the Durban Platform extends the life of the Kyoto Protocol until 2018, the exact legalities still have to be thrashed out. Already the Canadians are wriggling; America, Australia and Japan found enough wriggle room in Kyoto never to implement the provisions which they agreed to in Japan all those years ago.

That is one of the problems with these big political jamborees. They are all run by politicians who have, by the very nature of their tenure, a very short planning horizon. None of them are prepared to commit their countries to real cuts in emissions or real action to limit, let alone contemplate, the reduction of the amount of fossil fuel-fed energy consumption. The result of Durban therefore, is at best a situation where Planet Earth is legally bound to the spectre of a warming of 4°C.

Where COP 17 failed was to gain an agreement that compels nations to begin to take radical steps to first stabilise fossil fuel emissions and then begin to reverse the trend before 2020. This would mean such actions as limiting the amount of fossil fuel energy produced and consumed, heavy subsidisation of research into and production of alternative sources of energy and serious consequences for those who breach the terms of the agreement. This is not going to happen any time soon!

An issue of concern will always be the fact that a conference of this nature will inevitably arrive at an agreement set at the lowest common denominator. It is almost impossible to contemplate an aspirational agreement being reached, one which raises the bar and therefore the quality of life and standards of all, for all generations to come. There is inadequate leadership and political will in the world today for that to happen.

Another positive aspect of COP 17 is the fact that the debates and activities around and in support of the actual conference brought the issues clearly and starkly into the public domain. So it became more than just a venue where politicians could thrash out a political accord. It was a venue that brought together some of the brightest scientific minds and some of the most radical environmentalists. This collection and concatenation of thoughts and debate helped all of us to begin to understand the complexity of the issues and the urgency of the situation all of us are in.

However, Alf Wills, SA’s Chief Negotiator is right when he asserts that just getting an agreement that the US, China and India would agree to is a great step forward. And this is the real success of COP 17. All of the almost 200 countries represented at the Conference signed the agreement. We know that many have to obtain ratification of it from their parliaments before implementation and this is a process fraught with many pitfalls but at least it creates hope that there is a realization in the world of the seriousness and urgency of the situation.

The one thing we all have to appreciate is that we are all in this together. There is no escape for any of us or our children, or even our children’s children!

You can get all of the drama and detail on the COP 17 website: http://www.cop17-cmp7durban.com/

Tony Frost

 

 

 

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