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UN climate talks in jeopardy in fossil fuel backlash OMG!!!

Thomas Spritzler was fiercly rebuked yesterday at the UN Manatee Summit by a renegade faction from Shebogean Wisc. "We're trying to lose weight but were not signing our own death warrant by swearing off brats and cheddar cheese".


Said Spritz, I'm trying to get them to eat Brussel Sprouts but they keep laughing behind my back and throwing back pints of Falstaff.


Factoid: China continues to open one new coal burning power plant per week (not a typo, per week) the vast majority of which burn high sulper coal producing 3x the carbon of the stuff we're trying to phase out in the US.


COP28: UN climate talks in jeopardy in fossil fuel backlash

12th December 2023

By Georgina Rannard, BBC News

Climate reporter at COP28, Dubai


The UN climate talks COP28 are hosted by United Arab Emirates this year


The UN climate talks in Dubai could be in jeopardy after some nations reacted furiously to a draft deal on fossil fuels they call "weak".


The draft removed language included in a previous text suggesting that fossil fuels could be "phased out".


All 198 countries at the summit must agree or there is no deal.

A new amended version of the text is expected to be issued on Tuesday so that negotiations can continue.


Humans burning fossil fuels is driving global warming, risking millions of lives, but governments have never agreed how or when to stop using them.

A representative for the European Union called the draft "unacceptable" and said the bloc could walk away.


"We can't accept the text," said minister Eamon Ryan, a negotiator for the EU and Ireland's environment minister. But he added that the collapse of the talks is "not the outcome the world needs".


Politicians, including from nations on the frontline of climate change, have been in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to discuss the growing problem in a year that is set to be the warmest on record.


The question of what to do about greenhouse gas emissions from burning oil, coal and gas have dominated the talks.


Expectations were low that the controversial COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber could deliver a strong deal on fossil fuels because he is also CEO of the Abu Dhabi oil giant Adnoc.


But countries that want a rapid end to fossil fuels had grown optimistic as Mr Jaber appeared to say he backed a "phase out" of fossil fuels.


A draft text published on Saturday confirmed that one option for the talks outcome was a "phase out of fossil fuels in line with best available science".


Questions remained over when this would happen and whether it would rely on the use of expensive and experimental technology to store the carbon dioxide released when fossil fuels are burned.


On Monday, another draft was published that deleted mentions of "phase out". Instead it said nations should "reduce consumption and production of fossil fuels in a just, orderly and equitable manner".


While the changes in language can seem small, slight differences in UN documents can significantly change what countries are obliged to do.


Many nations appear to have had just an hour to look at the text before a meeting of all governments was called.


Representatives from Pacific Island nations at risk from sea level rise at at COP28

Countries on the frontline of climate change - places where sea-level rises are already destroying homes and storms are killing people - condemned the draft deal.

"We will not sign our death certificate," said a representative for the Alliance of Small Island States, adding it would not agree to a text without "strong commitments on phasing out fossil fuels".


Mr Jaber, the COP28 president, said the text reflected his ambitions and called it a "huge step forward".


But a spokesperson for the US said the part of the text about fossil fuels "needs to be substantially strengthened".


And the UK called the draft "disappointing" and said it "does not go far enough". A spokesperson said "there must be a phase out of unabated fossil fuels to meet our climate goals".


The Least Developed Countries Group said it could not accept the text, with its chairperson asking: "Where is the ambition?"


Saudi Arabia, which has been reportedly blocking strong language on fossil phase out throughout the talks, did not respond to a request for comment.


And developing nations that wanted more support in moving their economies away from fossil fuels to renewable energy are also likely to support a deal that places less emphasis on a rapid phase out of coal, oil and gas.


The latest text did include a promise to treble renewable energy capacity by 2030, a pledge signed earlier in the talks by more than 100 nations.


The draft appears to fall short of the standard for success laid out earlier on Monday by UN Secretary-General António Guterres.


He said the talks will be judged on nations' ability to decide on the future of coal, oil and gas.


The meeting will only be considered a success if it reaches "consensus on the need to phase out fossil fuels in line with a timeline of 1.5C", he said.


Nations have promised to keep global temperature rise below 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.


The talks are officially supposed to finish on Tuesday but could overrun as nations argue over the final deal.

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