Joint Assembly to consider climate problem
by Hans van de Veen
Can the EU-ACP relationship be used to strengthen the dialogue
between Europe and the main victims of climate change? And can the Lomonvention be one of the tools to promote climate protection measures, as well
as the implementation of the Climate
Treaty? These questions will be considered in depth at a hearing
on climate derange scheduled for the next ACP-EU Joint Assembly, to be held in
the last week of September 1996.
Periods of heavy rain have always been part of normal life in
Fiji. But the latest rains were different, says counsellor Taina Tudau of the
Fiji Embassy in Brussels. 'They were much more extreme than what we were used
to, and caused heavy damage. Normally it took several days of heavy rain before
the floods came up. This time, the water flooded the islands almost immediately
the rain began to fall.' Mrs Tudau sees two main causes for the recent flooding.
First, there is heavy deforestation on the islands, causing widespread erosion.
But she is sure there was another reason for the recent damage: 'In the Pacific
we know the local climate is changing. We see that the sea is rising. We are
experiencing more extreme weather events. There can be no doubt that global
warming is already going on.'
Fiji is a prominent member of the Alliance of Small Island
States (Aosis), the group of 36 nations which feel particularly threatened by
global warming. At the first Conference of Parties to the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change, held in Berlin in March 1995, Aosis called for
industrialised nations to reduce their C02 emissions by 20% by 2005 (based on
1990 levels). At the end of the conference, the 150 national delegations agreed
to begin negotiations on targets for industrialised nations to cut emissions in
the early years of the next century.
So intentions may be good, but in practice not much has been
done yet. The EU, for its part, risks losing credibility if firm action is not
taken soon. According to a recent Commission White Paper on energy policy, the
use of energy within the Union will increase by 1% a year up to 2020. Failing
'any strong policy interventions', the paper says, emissions of carbon dioxide
are likely to show a 'substantial increase' during this period. Says
Fiji-counsellor Tudau: 'As small island states we know what's at stake, but
there seems to be no feeling of urgency in the rest of the world. We really
wonder how long it will take before there is a definite move towards reduction
of greenhouse gases.'
EU-ACP cooperation
At the Berlin conference, the ACP countries-led by Aosis but
with support from most of the African states -took a constructive and moderate
position in the G77. The position adopted by the EU could also be described as
moderate, certainly compared to that of other OECD countries. Several observers
have pointed to the fact that these two moderate approaches by important blocks
within the Climate Convention negotiations offer possibilities for some form of
cooperation.
'No doubt the EU represents the most progressive group of
countries
within the OECD, although its position is far from sufficient',
says Sible Schone, a representative of the World Wide Fund for Nature. 'Besides
that, the EU has a special relationship with a large group of developing
countries. Quite obviously it will be significant to get a dialogue started
between the EU and the ACPs on the subject of climate change.' Currently, there
is no such dialogue. 'At the moment we are not in a dialogue with ACP countries
on climate change', says Bertil Heerink of the European Commission's Environment
Directorate-General who is a member of the EU delegation to the climate
negotiations. 'I'm convinced this will happen some day, but first we have to
agree on our own goals and measures. I am sure developing countries want us to
give priority to this too.'
The special ACP subcommittee to deal with tropical timber, the
environment and fisheries, formed after the signing of the revised LomV, only
recently started its work. With respect to the global warming issue, it is
waiting for the Joint Assembly hearing, according to ambassador Michael King of
Barbados, who is a committee member. 'The specific interests of the different
regions have to be articulated there, and then some kind of sustained effort has
to be initiated.'
The unit for Sustainable Development and Natural Resources in
the Development Directorate-General of the Commission (DG VIII) not at present
dealing with the subject of climate change. Says Head of Unit, Amos Tincani: 'We
have worked on biodiversity and desertification, and we want to do more on the
specific environmental problems of small island states. But we have done nothing
similar on climate change. This is partly because it is so much a global
problem, but the main reason is we simply lack the people and the time to go
into it.'
Assembly hearing
At its meeting in Windhoek in March this year, the Joint
Assembly adopted a resolution which had been proposed by representatives of 13
small island states. This urged the EU to take the lead in combating climate
change and the adverse effects thereof. More specifically, the Commission is
being asked to update its climate change strategy for the period post-2000 and
to achieve significant reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases over the
coming decade and thereafter. The resolution riches on to call for extra
assistance to ACP countries in the Caribbean, Pacific and Indian Ocean to help
them improve their disaster preparedness. The Commission is also urged to
accelerate the transfer of appropriate technologies and practices, to enable ACP
states to develop coastal zone management strategies and to rehabilitate and
protect areas stricken by drought and desertification as well as by hurricanes
and floods.
Two representatives of the European Parliament, Maartje van
Putter (PES) and Peter Liege (EPP), have been active on the situation of the
small island states and climate change for several years. According to Mrs Van
Putten, the main effect of the coming Assembly hearing should be to put extra
pressure on the Commission to take its responsibility seriously. 'Talking about
climate change,' she says, 'one should never forget who is to blame and who,
therefore, must take decisive action. A European tax on energy or carbon dioxide
would be an important first step, but no more than that.'
Besides influencing the Commission's energy policy, Mrs Van
Putten hopes the Assembly hearing will raise public awareness on the climate
problem in those ACP countries which are not in the 'small island' category. 'If
you are talking about rising sea levels, the African states with low-lying
coastal zones face the same problems as the small island countries,' she points
out. 'And they also face the problem of desertification and declining food
production.'
Integrating the climate dimension
In a recent briefing paperto the Commission, the International
Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) concluded that, hitherto, the
aid community (including the EU) had not incorporated measures on global warming
into their strategic thinking on sustainable development. 'Indeed, the
possibility of climate change has been considered of minor importance in
comparison to other environmental concerns.' This is hardly surprising, says the
London-based institute, as the climate issue has only recently been placed on
the international agenda. Moreover, the long-term threat of global warming
raises some difficult questions regarding priorities in circumstances where
resources are limited. In other words: who wants to spend scarce funds on
problems the full effects of which will probably not be felt for another 25 to
50 years? The best way forward, suggests the IIED, is to tackle the apparent
conflict between shortterm development priorities and longterm climate
protection, by 'integrating the climate dimension' rather than considering
climate change as an issue in isolation.
Technology transfer could be a central point, according to WWF's
Sible Schone. 'Developing countries see technology transfer as a central theme
in the Climate Convention, but the industrialised countries don't give enough
weight to these There are a lot of paragraphs about technology transfer in the
Convention as well as in LomNow it's time to fill in these commitments.'
Strangely, there are hardly any Lomrojects currently under
way in the field of energy efficiency. It is strange because experts have
pointed to the large potential in developing countries for cost-effective energy
improvement and energy conservation. Improved management could save at least 25%
of the energy now being consumed. Quick realisation of this potential would
significantly contribute to alleviating environmental development problems.
Henri Martin, energy specialist in DG VIII, agrees a lot more
could be done in this field, but he points out: 'We are dependent on requests.
If you look at the wording of the Convention, everything has already been said.
There are chapters on energy and technology transfer. The problem is that we
don't get enough signals back from the ACP countries that these items are a
priority for them. I'm afraid sustainable energy or energy efficiency is not
high on the agenda of most countries.' Taina Tudau disagrees strongly: 'Our
experience is that the projects that could make a difference and contribute to
sustainable development, protection of the environment and local sustainable
energy production, are found to be too small. It is the donor that sets the
conditions for the projects, not us, the small island states.'
New funding?
Can the EU build a credible policy linking climate and
development cooperation, without reserving extra money? Not surprisingly, there
is disagreement on this question. In Brussels, officials are inclined to point
to possibilities that are already there but not being used. Amos Tincani, for
instance, observes that 'there are budgets for this kind of problem under LomWe have provisions specially targeted for the islands'. He mentions regional
budgets in particular: 'A lot can be started at the regional level which then
trickles down to the national level. But after producing fine resolutions,
everybody seems to forget the work still needs to be done. The idea is: 'oh yes,
we can do it, provided it is with fresh money'. We say: a lot more can be done
with existing budgets and instruments.'
Maartje van Putten, from the Parliament, says the discussion
should not be 'dominated by southern demands for additional money'. She agrees
that ACP countries could make better use of existing funds and possibilities,
such as, for instance, the funds for intra ACP cooperation. But counsellor Tudau
points to the fact that the Climate Convention urges industrialised countries to
support the response of developing countries to climate problems through 'new
and additional' money, besides the transfer of environmentally sound
technologies and expertise.
There is a financial mechanism built into the Climate
Convention, which is administered by the Global Environmental Facility, to cover
additional costs of appropriate measures. But much more could be done by the aid
community, including the EU, according to Mrs Tudau. 'Most European countries
will not succeed in stabilising, let alone reducing, their emissions. In
reaction to this, as ACP countries we should say: European Union, you are not
fulfilling your obligations. You have to try harder and you have to set extra
money aside to compensate for the damage this is doing to
us.
H.v.d.V.