Way to Copenhagen

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Transcript Way to Copenhagen

Slide 1

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 2

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 3

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 4

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 5

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 6

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 7

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 8

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 9

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 10

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 11

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 12

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 13

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 14

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 15

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 16

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 17

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 18

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 19

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 20

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 21

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 22

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 23

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 24

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 25

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 26

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 27

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 28

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen
Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Thank you….

www.equitybd.org


Slide 29

Way to Copenhagen
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Climate talks aims at hammering
out a global climate deal to limit greenhouse
gas emissions when the Kyoto Protocol's first
commitment period expires at the end of 2012.
The new deal is to tackle the causes of
climate change (mitigation) and to assist
countries to cope with the effects of climate
change that we can no longer avoid
(adaptation).

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

Three major blocks
European Union
United States, supported by Japan
and Canada
G77 and China.
Other regional blocs like; African Group; LDC Group;
The Alliance of Small Island Developing States-AOSIS
Group; Environmental Integrity Group; Umbrella
Group etc
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The G 77 and China is the major one that comprises
with 132 countries which includes developing, LDCs,
and the small island countries.
In fact, the G 77 and China is the platform of almost all
the Non Annex Country Parties who are historically not
responsible for the present climate crisis.
G 77 and China is a distinctive negotiating bloc of common
interest. But again given the disparity in economic
comparability, GDP growth it’s a heterogeneous Group led
by the advanced developing countries of different interest.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term
Cooperative Action under the UNFCCC (AWGLCA)
AWG-LCA was established in CoP 13 in Bali with the
adoption of the Bali Action Plan, with a mandate
to focus on four key elements of long-term:
mitigation, adaptation, finance and technology.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments for Annex I Parties under the
Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP ).
AWG-KP was established in 2005 on the basis of
Protocol Article 3.9, which mandates consideration
of Annex I parties’ further commitments at least
seven years before the end of the first commitment
period.

www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
The two key bodies under the Bali Roadmap
are the AWG-LCA and the AWG-KP.
The work in Bangkok under the AWG-LCA focused
on the key elements of BAP, namely: adaptation,
finance, technology, mitigation, capacity building
The AWG-LCA produced a number of non papers
that will be forwarded to the resumed AWG-LCA in
Copenhagen.
www.equitybd.org

Way to Copenhagen

The agenda of discussion
On the other hand discussion under AWG-KP
rounded on Annex I parties’ emission reductions
beyond the first commitment period under the
Kyoto Protocol.
In addition, parties continued to discuss other
issues in the AWG-KP´s work programme, including
the flexibility mechanisms, land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF) as well as potential
consequences of response measures.
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Discussion on AWG-LCA 7
Mitigation: the BAP contains the following sub-paragraphs:
1(b)(i) on mitigation by developed countries: Measurable,
reportable and verifiable nationally appropriate
mitigation commitments or actions, including quantified
emission limitation and reduction objectives, ensuring
the comparability of efforts among them, considering
differences in national circumstances.
1(b)(ii) on mitigation by developing countries; Nationally
appropriate mitigation actions in the context of
sustainable development supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
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Discussion on AWG-LCA

1(b)(iii) on reducing deforestation and forest
degradation in developing countries, plus
conservation (REDD-plus);
1(b)(iv) on sectoral approaches;
1(b)(v) on various approaches to enhance the cost
effectiveness of mitigation action, including
markets; and
1(b)(vi) on consequences of response measures.
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Among the six sub-paragraphs of discussion on 1(b)(i)
and 1(b)(ii) created ‘deep divides’: These are:
Creating a separate sub-group to consider proposals
relating to common elements of mitigation by all parties.

A proposal on monitoring, reporting and verification
(MRV) for all parties, which builds on the existing
frameworks, and would introduce enhanced reporting,
as well as a technical review by experts.
National schedules of mitigation commitments or
actions
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Conflicting Word: MAJOR EMMITERS;
Japan emphasized their pledge of 25% emission
reduction from 1990 levels by 2020 is premised on
fair agreements with the participation of the MAJOR
EMMITERS.
Chain-India-Kuwait emphasized that the words like
'Advanced Developing Countries', 'Major
Emitters' are mentioned nowhere in the Convention
and Protocol;
Discussion should be based on 'Historical
Responsibility' and the principle of 'Common but
Differentiated Responsibilities'.
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Commitment in Place for Mitigation:

Japan 25% from 1990 levels by 2020
The EU, with NORWAY, underscored that they
wished to see a collective ambition to reduce
emissions by 30% below 1990 levels by 2020.
Total aggregate commitment in place is 11-18%
below 1990 levels by 2020 which would lead to a
temperature increase of “3ºC or worse.”
Annex I countries attempt to move away from their
historical responsibility.
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Mitigation commitments or actions by the Annex
I country Parties,
Stabilization at 450 ppm or less proposed by the
developed country parties,
Federated States of Micronesia, supported by
AOSIS, preferred stabilization below 350 ppm
Norway outlined plans to reduce by 40% below
1990 levels by 2020.
Mitigation commitments still considerably low, while
science demands 45 reduction from 1990 levels by 2020
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Measures of Achieving Targets

There also heated debate on comparability of
efforts, mitigation commitments or actions, and
achievement of QELROs by the developed country
Parties (Quantified Emission Reduction Objectives).
The Federated States of Micronesia, for AOSIS, and
COSTA RICA stressed that the developed countries
should achieve their QELROs primarily through
domestic emission reduction.

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Achievement of Targets
G77 and China express worries that the use of
offsetting mechanisms i.e. CDM and REDD in
achieving QELROs will weaken emission reduction
commitments.
BRAZIL, with COLOMBIA, asked to introduce
defining limits to the use of market mechanisms.
BOLIVIA highlighted a recent proposal by her
country that developed countries should achieve
their QELROs domestically and not through market
mechanisms.
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Adaptation:
to address the urgent and immediate needs of
developing countries, especially SIDS, LDCs and
African countries,
Mechanisms for addressing loss and damage
caused by disasters associated with Climate
Change
China cautioned against establishing vulnerability
criteria based on national circumstances, respective
financial and technical capabilities, levels of risk
and impacts, as well as levels of poverty.
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Adaptation

Saudi Arabia called for retaining language on impacts
of response measures.
The G-77/China called for inclusion of migration,
displacement, and planned relocation. Colombia
said that 30% of adaptation funding should be
dedicated to disaster reduction and preparedness.

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Adaptation Finance
Institutional arrangement of finance and
US/MEXICAN proposal of ‘’Global Climate Change
Fund’’.
JAPAN supported using existing institutional
mechanisms.
Measurable Verifiable and Reportable on financial
Mechanism.

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Adaptation Finance

The LDCs emphasized that existing institutions have failed to provide
adequate financing and that a new multi-window institution is needed.
Funding should come from public sources in developed countries
and be supplemental to official development assistance. Therefore,
the use of existing mechanisms was opposed by the Philippines, for
the G-77/CHINA, Uganda, for the LDCs, and Egypt, for the

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MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
MEXICAN proposal on the architecture of the Global
Climate Change Fund,
Participation both by the Developed and Developing
Countries as per emissions, population and
economy.
Developing country’s contributions would be “much
smaller but not zero,”.

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MEXICAN/US proposal on Finance
The LDCs would be the only “accepted free-riders;”
developing countries would get more than they
contribute;
Global Fund/US Proposal
Continuation of the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
as an operating entity of the financial mechanism.
All parties, except the LDCs, would contribute to the
fund in line with capabilities but that contributions
would not be mandatory
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Killing KP……A common and Single Protocol for all
Country Parties !!

………"It has become clear that the intention of
developed countries is to kill the Kyoto Protocol."

…..Ambassador Yu Kintai from China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs told "The reason why we are not
making any progress is the lack of political will on
the part of the Annex I countries to make progress."

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Position on Mitigation
Emission reduction by developed countries by 45%
by 2020 compared to 1990 level (similar to that of
LDCs and SIDS)
Keep temperature increase well below 1.5 degree
Celsius
Green House Concentration by 350 ppm by 2100.
Allow the Green House Gas Concentration
peaking by 2015
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Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Mandatory contributions from Annex-I Parties for meeting
the cost of adaptation, which should be supported
primarily and from ‘public sources’ and the secondary
mechanisms may be International Air Passenger
Adaptation Levy (IAPAL) or Green Levy on Air Fare and
other new and innovative mechanisms.
Financial resources should be over and above the
existing 0.7% Overseas Development Assistance (ODA);
the proposed financial resources should not be less
than 1.5% of the GDP contribution by the Annex-I Parties
and with of increased allocation to the LDCs and SIDS
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Position on Mitigation and Adaptation Finance
Adaptation fund must be provided on a grant basis
Finance should be sustainable, sovereign
ownership of the recipient countries; should be free
from domination of existing financial architecture.
The level of financing should be adequate and
predictable with direct, simplified and quicker access
especially by the LDCs.

Immigration rights of the climate change induced
forced migrants to the Annex I countries with ensuring
their social, cultural and economic rights.
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Position on Technology Transfer
Support is to be provided to the developing countries for
upgrading indigenous technologies through innovation,
creating markets for relevant technologies with the right
kind of investment and enabling environment
LDCs should be exempted from the obligation of patent
protection of climate related technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, as required for capacity building and
development.

Development of Climate Change Adaptation and
Mitigation Technologies must be kept outside the present
IPR regime.
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Position on Technology Transfer
Annex I Parties should support Innovative Climate
Change Research and technology development and
make it freely available to the LDC country Parties.
Patented technologies should be made available
free of charge to the LDC/SIDS
Genetic resources, that are essential for adaptation
in agriculture, must not be patented by multinational
or any other corporations. These are also should not
be consider as traded item under the IPR regime of
WTO
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Thank you….

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