Briefing note on the informal high-level consultations
on Climate Change held by the President of COP-6
Prepared by Hernan LOPEZ hernan@iisd.org and Kimo GOREE kimo@iisd.org
Editors
Note: This briefing note was prepared following both conversations
with participants and comments by Jan Pronk
at the press briefing. Our information is only as good as the veracity
and memory of our informants.
---------------------
High-level informal consultations on climate change were held from
20-21 April 2001 at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York. They were
held as a parallel but separate event of the High-Level segment of the
ninth meeting of the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD-9).
The
consultations started on Friday, 20 April, with an evening buffet, and
continued on Saturday, 21 April, from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm. A press
conference was held by the President of COP-6 Jan
Pronk at the end of the consultations at 6 pm.
Background
The
meeting was convened by the President of COP-6, Jan
Pronk (The Netherlands), and the UNFCCC
Secretariat, and gathered more than 40 Ministers of the Environment,
high-level officials and observers from 40 to 50 countries,
non-governmental and other organizations, and the co-chairs of the
various contact groups of the COP as resource persons. The list of
countries represented included inter alia:
Antigua & Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Burkina
Faso, Canada, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, European
Commission, France, Germany, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran, Italy,
Japan, Mauritania, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway,
Poland, Russia, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa,
Sweden, Switzerland, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, United States of
America, United Kingdom, Vanuatu and Zimbabwe.
Introductory remarks
During
the buffet on Friday evening, participants listened to welcoming words
by the President of COP-6, Jan Pronk, who
explained that the informal consultations were aimed to advance
political preparations before COP-6 resumed session. He
explained that upon the receipt of many written submissions by Parties
to the UNFCCC Secretariat after COP-6, as well as a large number of
bilateral consultations, he had prepared a brief paper outlining some
potential avenues of progress on key political questions, which must
be resolved at COP-6 resumed session. He said that consultations
should help to provide a better sense of where possible solutions lie
and how to achieve agreement on the issues included in the Buenos
Aires Plan of Action. Discussions would also provide proposals on
substance and on how to how to proceed until COP-6 resumed session.
Participants listened to Michael Zammit
Cutajar, Executive Director of the UNFCCC
Secretariat, who, according to participants present in the room, said
the process of negotiations is in crisis for the first time in ten
years as a result of the US declaration in late March that the Kyoto
Protocol was dead. He said that this crisis has urged countries to act
and added that the full attendance at the consultations showed the
will of countries to find convergence at the end of the road. He
signaled that the Kyoto protocol continued to represent the way
forward in this situation of uncertainty.
Bob Watson, Chair of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), provided
participants with recent scientific findings of the IPCC Working Group
conclusions that show changes in climate occurring as a result of
human activities, and called on countries to act now.
Discussions
Consultations started at 9:30 in the morning of Saturday, 21 April.
COP-6 President Jan Pronk explained that
ministers were convened to discuss his proposal in order to draft a
new text that reflects a common denominator basis for a compromise,
and to comment on the US decision. The consultations focused on three
main questions that underlined the discussions: the belief that the
UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol provide the framework of the international
negotiations to address climate change; the value of the new
President's proposal as contributing to the success of the
negotiations; and the way forward in the negotiations after the US
declared its position against the Protocol.
On the
UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol as the framework of the international
negotiations to address climate change, all countries supported the
UNFCCC as the framework for international negotiations. All countries
but one supported the Kyoto Protocol. The US said it still believes in
the UNFCCC as the framework for its voluntary effort to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, but opposes the Protocol and noted that the
new administration is engaged in a policy review at the cabinet level
on this matter, and will present the results at COP-6 resumed session
in Bonn. The participant from the US said this policy review involves
consideration of working in a different track to the Protocol,
specifically regarding the issue of developing countries involvement,
the economic costs for the US economy and some aspects of the IPCC
scientific findings such as the duration and location of climate
change consequences.
In
general, all countries urged the new US administration to come back to
negotiations of the Protocol, arguing many reasons including: the US
is the largest emitter of GHGs in the
world; the science is straightforward; and, that there is now proof
that the economic costs of implementing actions to combat climate
change are not as high as expected. The G-77/China delivered a
statement supporting both the UNFCCC and the Protocol as the valid
framework and said the Protocol should not be renegotiated. Sources
present in the room said the G-77/China had suggested using middle
ground language, cautioned against confronting the US, and had
supported accommodating possible agreement among different groups.
They said the UK minister had delivered a speech that raised applause
from the audience. In this speech, he said that the US should not use
the economic costs of implementing the Protocol as an argument to
oppose it since it is now demonstrated that the cost of no action
would be higher. He also said, in line with other country statements
on juridical aspects of the US decision, that the US had signed the
UNFCCC and the Protocol as a state and not as a government. States are
entities that transcend governments, and whichever party is in charge
of the new administration should not ignore their commitments.
Germany, in line with the UK, added that both countries had long
demonstrated that the economic costs of implementing the Protocol
would not be as high as predicted. He said that if there would be
costs, these would be minimal and should be assumed now, because they
would be higher later and include not only economic but also social
costs. He explained that both Germany and the UK worked together with
their business sectors to adopt some voluntary actions to reduce
emissions, showing that the implementation of the Protocol would not
be too costly.
The EU
supported the implementation of the Protocol, arguing that it provides
the only international instrument and political basis for addressing
climate change. The EU called on Parties to be flexible in working out
agreements over the coming months and stressed some of its positions,
including inter alia, the provision
of substantial resources to developing countries for the
implementation of the Convention and the Protocol. The EU also
stressed that the implementation of the Kyoto Protocol must lead to
significant, real domestic reductions in Annex I countries, although
also signaling a willingness to discuss
supplementarity. On sinks, the EU recalled their concerns about
scale, uncertainty and risks, although welcoming the structure
suggested by the President's paper regarding potential volumes. The EU
also supported the suggestions made by President
Pronk on compliance regarding consequences.
Japan
supported the implementation of the Protocol, arguing that the
international community could not disregard 10 years of negotiations.
The SIDS group and Mexico suggested considering the issue of
adaptation and holding a workshop of experts before COP-6 resumed
session. Australia, Switzerland, New Zealand among others supported
the implementation of the Protocol, reflecting an overall conciliatory
spirit in their statements.
In the
corridors, sources from two developing countries expressed doubt that
the US cabinet-level policy review would result in the return of the
US to the process and ratification of the protocol. They agreed that
it is obvious that the new US administration will not make any
commitment to international efforts on climate change.
On the
value of the new President's proposal as contributing to the success
of the Protocol negotiations, Parties noted that
Pronk's paper had problems in the areas of process, substance
and ownerships. The G-77/China recognized progress in areas such as
financial mechanisms, although arguing that the group's position
regarding the principles and concepts of the UNFCCC and the Protocol
had been downplayed or neglected. The group stated that their position
on various issues that had been presented at COP-6 in The Hague was
still valid.
The OPEC countries accepted
Pronk's proposal in general but disputed
some aspects such as sinks. Canada said Pronk's
paper demonstrates that the middle ground, which must lie between
countries' positions, is quite elusive and noted the need to find a
more balanced approach. Canada suggested working on the basis of four
issues as outlined in the original version of
Pronk's paper, including: financial support for developing
countries and their role in the Protocol; effective and accessible
market mechanisms; fair and realistic treatment of agriculture and
forest sinks; and, a compliance regime. He explained that this new
paper does not reflect the three sections of the IPCC Third Assessment
Report (TAR), briefly introduced to ministers during the opening
buffet on Friday night.
President Pronk explained that this new
proposal was drafted upon the reception of many written submissions by
countries, as well as a large number of bilateral consultations after
COP-6. He added that the new paper includes the US former
administration's position on many of the issues and recalled that this
approach is valid since the climate change factors remain the same
despite the new administration.
President
Pronk promised participants that he will
deliver a new text without brackets in early June, which could form
the basis for negotiations at COP-6 resumed session in July. He also
announced that the government of The Netherlands would contribute
towards a meeting of the G-77/China by the end of June to enable the
analysis of his proposal. President Pronk
encouraged other parties to engage in discussions that would include
their ministries of foreign affairs due to the fact that this is a
process that needs a political solution.
On the
way forward in the negotiations after the US declared its position
against the Protocol, the majority of countries believed that
negotiations should continue to reach consensus even with the US
departing from the process. According to President
Pronk, some countries expressed doubts
whether it would be possible to reach agreement at COP-6 resumed
session in Bonn without the US, although they said they had
compromised in their work towards consensus. He said that other
countries found it highly desirable that the US stays in the process.
President Pronk said that the US
reaffirmed it is still part of the UNFCCC – which provides the basis
for voluntary actions, but that this would not be enough to reach
consensus with other countries. He said the EU believes it is
necessary to continue work on achieving the target of Protocol
ratification in 2002.
President Pronk said the US promised to
attend COP-6 resumed session, where they would deliver the results of
their cabinet-level policy review.
Outcome
President Pronk said that the
consultations did not deliver great substantial achievements although
he considered "the family is still together." Using the phrase used by
the US last March that the Protocol "was dead," he said that after the
consultations the Protocol is not completely healthy but is
recovering.
He
said that there is always flexibility and some room for negotiation
but stressed that some aspects of the Protocol could not be negotiated
again, including that it is a binding legal instrument that enacts
timeframes and targets, and principles that embrace some exceptions
for developing countries.
According to sources present at the meeting, delegates and ministers
delivered political statements in a conciliatory atmosphere. However,
there was a sense of lack of progress in the room and the corridors
while the meeting was coming to an end. While there was no
confrontation this time, there was a sense that the process is stalled
and not moving along as it should.
Next
steps
Further informal
consultations will likely to be held on the occasion of the Diplomatic
Conference for the signing of the POPs
Convention, which is scheduled to take place from 21-23 May 2001, in
Stockholm, Sweden. Pronk promised these
consultations would focus on his new proposal and be more
comprehensive and take into account all the countries that are Parties
to the process, including the US.
Pronk
said that these informal consultations could be limited to a reduced
group of experts that could help overcome the differences on issues
and outstanding areas that caused the breakdown of talks at COP-6, and
to advance consensus. The G-77/China however, called for an
"open-ended group" type of consultations conducted in a transparent
manner.
The consultations closed at
4:30 pm on Saturday, April 21, 2001.