Cancun Can!

Cancun Can!

Concluding plenary at COP-16

Oh, how much difference a year — and lower expectations — make! The BBC report on the Cancun meeting declared that “if Copenhagen was the Great Dane that whimpered, Cancun has been the Chihuahua that roared.”  Never mind that the Great Dane’s whimper was about the same decibel level as the Chihuahua’s roar.  Last year, expectations were sky high for a new legal agreement that would extend, complement or replace the Kyoto Protocol, so the non-binding Copenhagen Accord was a major disappointment.  This year expectations for the Cancun Conference were extremely low, so an outcome that essentially incorporates the Copenhagen Accord into the UNFCCC process is seen as a big win.

Frankly I was doubtful that the Cancun Conference would be able to accomplish this much.  Last year, a small group of countries successfully blocked the COP’s adoption of the Copenhagen Accord, leaving its status within the UNFCCC process uncertain.  Since Copenhagen, the big developing countries such as China and India voiced at beset tepid support for the Copenhagen Accord.  So I had thought it likely that Cancun would produce a weaker result.  But the Mexican chair (Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Patricia Espinosa, shown in the middle in the picture above) did a masterful job in creating a negotiating atmosphere in which countries had confidence, and in putting pressure on Venezuela and its allies not to sink the meeting.  (Reportedly, President Calderon personally called Chavez in an effort to dissuade Venezuela from blocking, as it did last year.)  In the end, when only Bolivia objected to the adoption of the text, Espinosa was able to simply note the Bolivian objection and then gavel the decision through, to widespread applause.

The Cancun Agreements reiterate all of the key elements of the Copenhagen Accord, including:

  • A long-term goal of limiting temperature increase to 2 degrees Celsius (with a review in 2015 that will consider whether to strengthen the goal to 1.5 degrees Celsius).
  • A mechanism for anchroing the emissions targets and actions pledged pursuant to the Copenhagen Accord in the UNFCCC process, through inclusion in two “INF” (information) documents — one for emission targets to be implemented by developed countries, which will be subject to measurement, reporting and verification (MRV); the other for nationally appropriate mitigation actions (NAMAs) to be implemented by developing countries, which will be subject to a process of international consultation and analysis (ICA).
  • A registry for listing NAMAs for which developing countries are seeking international support
  • A collective commitment by developed countries to provide $30 billion in fast start financing for the period 2010-2012, balanced between mitigation and adaptation, as well as a longer term goal of mobilizing jointly $100 billion per year by 2020, a “significant portion” of which should flow through the Green Climate Fund.
  • Establishment of a Green Climate Fund.

But the Cancun Agreements do not simply bring the Copenhagen Accord into the UNFCCC process; they elaborate and operationalize the three page Copenhagen Accord in thirty pages of decision text.  Among its key elements, the Cancun decisions:

  • Provide that the ICA process for developing country NAMAs will be performed by the Subsidiary Body on Implementation.
  • Provide that the Green Climate Fund will be managed by a board of 24 members, split between developed and developing countries, and will be administered for the first three years by the World Bank.
  • Establish a Technology Mechanism to facilitate technology development and transfer.
  • Set forth detailed provisions on adaptation in the Cancun Adaptation Framework.
  • Establish a framework for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD).

In Cancun, the growing splits among developing countries were on even clearer display than in Copenhagen.  India played a very constructive role (and in particular, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh), introducing a proposal on ICA that was very forward-leaning and suggesting that it could accept binding commitments.  The small island states continued to push for negotiation of a new protocol that would address emissions from countries without Kyoto targets.  And China found itself under increasing pressure from its fellow developing countries to accept some limits on its emissions.

Going forward, the Cancun decisions under both the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol leave open the question of legal form — that is, whether there should be a new legal agreement under the UNFCCC, a second commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol, or both.  The COP decision extends the mandate of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-Term Cooperative Action (AWG-LCA) for another year, and requests that it “continue discussing legal options with the aim to complete the agreed outcome” on the Bali Action Plan, and the parallel decision on the Kyoto Protocol calls on the AWG-KP to complete its work next year, so that there is no gap between commitment periods.

But whether or not next year’s Durban Conference is able to translate the Cancun Agreements into legal form, the Cancun outcome represents a significant achievement, which shows that – with proper management – the UNFCCC process is still able to move the ball forward.

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[…] Bodansky, Cancun Can!, Opinio Juris (Dec. 12, […]

Hiam Amar
Hiam Amar

I wonder how much it is going to take to get a developing country like China to agree to cut their emissions of greenhouse gases, considering how much they depend on it.

What are they doing to to pressure the countries into complying?

Instead of revisiting the goals in 2015, wouldn’t it help negotiations by lowering some of the limits from developing countries in order to encourage a legally binding treaty instead of risking another failed year.

At least the meeting was considered a success and they are one step closer to tackling the ozone problem. I wonder if a legally binding treaty is not ratified in the next 2 or 3 years if this will still be considered a success. if expectation were to get a deal done last year in Copenhagen, the international actors are selling themselves short for accepting anything less than a ratified treaty.