Is Saudi Arabia The Big Bad Wolf Of The Paris Climate Talks?

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BY KYLA MANDEL AND BRENDAN MONTAGUE IN PARIS

Oil rich Saudi Arabia is leading a campaign to sabotage attempts by countries on the front line of climate change to include an ambitous 1.5C target for global warming in the COP21 agreement currently being negotiated inย Paris.ย 

Wealthy nations – including Germany, France and now the United States – have all signalled support for including references to the lower target in the final text, as negotiators reachย the end of the first week ofย negotiations.

The oil producing giant last nightย blocked efforts to include references in the Paris deal to a UN report that says it would be better to limit global warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels rather than the current 2Cย target.

Saleemul Huq, director of the International Centre for Climate and Development, argues that the difference between a temperature increase of 1.5 degrees and two degrees โ€œis roughly 1.5 million people who will fall through the cracks and most of them will be in vulnerable and developingย countries.โ€

Thoriq Ibrahim, theย Maldives envoy and chair of the alliance of small island states (AOSIS), said the 1.5C was a โ€œmoral thresholdโ€ for hisย country.

Arabย Block

Emmanuel de Guzman, head of the Philippines delegation,ย said:ย โ€œThe momentum for raising the level of ambition in Paris now opens the exciting possibility for a truly historic and transformational summit. We salute France and Germany and call for more countries to join in the call for 1.5C to protect human rightsย globally.โ€

Todd Stern,ย the US special envoy for climate change, told reporters today that concerns raised by island nations over passing a 1.5C global warming temperature rise threshold areย โ€œlegitimateโ€.

โ€œWe are in active discussions with the islands and others about finding some way to represent their interests in having 1.5C referenced [in the Paris text] in some way,โ€ Stern said. โ€œWe havenโ€™t landed anywhere yet but we hear the concerns of those countries and we think these concerns areย legitimate.โ€

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has also come out in favour of a strong target. When asked about the 2C target today at the COP21 conference, Bloomberg said: โ€œI donโ€™t know if thatโ€™s the right target. The target should be zero [emissions] orย reducing.โ€

Butย Saudi Arabia is now being accused of prioritising its oil-based economy over the survival of vulnerable nations. This goes efforts byย a coalition of vulnerable countriesย to push the global community to adopt a new 1.5 degree global warmingย target.

The Climate Action Network tonight named Saudi Arabia โ€œFossil of the Dayโ€. A spokesman said:ย โ€œThe Saudi delegation here in Paris is doing its best to keep a meaningful mention of the 1.5 degree global warming limit out of theย agreement.ย 

โ€œThe Saudiโ€™s are trying to torpedo three years of hard science, commissioned by governments, that clearly shows 2 degrees warming is too much for vulnerable communities around the world. Saudi Arabia is fighting tooth and nail to ensure the Paris agreement basically says, ‘thanks, but no thanks’ to 1.5 degreesย warming.โ€

Substantiveย Discussions

Sven Harmeling, CARE Internationalโ€™s climate change advocacy coordinator, explained: โ€œSaudi Arabia is blocking these very substantive discussions going forward and [from] allowing ministers to understand whatโ€™s goingย forward.โ€

โ€œOverall we see increasing support for including the 1.5 limit in the Paris Agreement, with more than 110 countries in support, although some countries see it only in connection to below 2 degrees language. That adds pressure to those who see their fossil future threatened by a truly ambitious target,โ€ Harmeling told DeSmog UK.

โ€œHowever, Saudi Arabia may also want to use this to bargain on other issues which the vulnerable countries might not, e.g. in relation to other issues of the mitigation ambition package (such as long-term emission reduction goal), or response measures which is about the impacts of emission reduction i.e. reduction of fossil fuelย consumption.โ€

Meanwhile, OPEC oil producing countries are also attempting to block language on turning economies away from fossil fuels – something generally agreed by everyone else in theย negotiations.

Saudi Arabia is the 13th richest country in the world yet it refuses to make any financial contribution to the fight against climate change – this is despite claims to represent the poorest developing nations and support the end of fossilย fuels.

In contrast, countries with smaller economies than Saudi Arabia – including the UK, EU, France, Canada, Australia, Sweden and Germany – have already contributed climate finance and will continue to doย so.

King Salman bin Abdulaziz, the Saudi leader, did not speak at the COP21 opening on Monday. But Ali bin Ibrahim Al-Naimi, the Saudi Minister of Oil, hasย said: โ€œIn Saudi Arabia, we recognise that eventually, one of these days, we are not going to need fossil fuels. I donโ€™t know when, in 2040, 2050 orย thereafter.

โ€œThe kingdom [plans] to become a โ€˜global power in solar and wind energyโ€™ and could start exporting electricity instead of fossil fuels in comingย years.โ€

Saudi Arabia says it will make some investment in renewables and slowly reduce its dependence on fossil fuels. The country is the worldโ€™s 10th largest CO2 emitter – more than the UK, Canada, Brazil, Australia, Indonesia and France – and it has failed to make any emission reduction pledge.

What’s more, there is a strong caveat within Saudi’s climate pledge, which points out the country still relies on a โ€œrobust contribution from oil export revenues to the nationalย economyโ€.ย 

Saudi is also looking to water down language about aligning broader financial flows to be compatible with climate objectives โ€“ ensuring that revenues raised by oil do not go back into polluting investments โ€“ which will be essential if there is to be a managed and orderly clean economicย transition.

Photo: Brendan Montague, from Paris
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Kyla is a freelance writer and editor with work appearing in the New York Times, National Geographic, HuffPost, Mother Jones, and Outside. She is also a member of the Society for Environmental Journalists.

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