It was never really in doubt. But the first week of COP28 (the 28th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change) made one crucial fact impossible to ignore: the fossil fuel industry is not planning to go quietly. Far more of its lobbyists are in the UAE than have attended UN climate talks before.

The battle is hotting up over what next week’s report on progress towards the Paris goals, known as the global stocktake, will say. Fossil fuel interests—both corporate and national—are pushing hard to avoid references to the phase-out that would signal the end of their business model and vast profits. They don’t want an energy transition that leads to their demise.

One of the key battlegrounds at COP28 is that of language: whether fossil fuels will be phased “down” or “out”. The choice is either reducing carbon energy sources or getting rid of them entirely. The latter would be preferable, but there are many other battles to be won. There will be haggling over whether a transition to a cleaner future should see fossil fuels “unabated”, with greenhouse gas emissions released directly into the atmosphere, or “abated”, where carbon capture technology and carbon offsets reduce the harm caused. The latter have so far failed to deliver promised benefits, with which there appears more of a risk than a solution, in enabling the necessity of replacing fossil fuels to be ducked.

Currently, not a single G20 country has policies in place that are consistent with the 1.5°C target. Some, including the UK under Rishi Sunak, are moving in the wrong direction. Meanwhile, the former UN climate chief Christiana Figueres highlighted the unfinished business of financing a “global business plan” for decarbonisation. Climate change is eroding poor nations’ development gains, and if without cash to adapt, such gains will be unachievable in the future. Yet finance flows to developing countries, according to the UN, are roughly a tenth of the $340bn needed by 2030. Bitter divisions between developing and developed countries on this issue almost derailed climate talks earlier this year.

Climate scientists are increasingly desperate. The emissions-cutting process stewarded by COP is failing. Although the rate of increase has fallen, overall emissions are still rising. Perverse though it may seem, in one sense the strenuous efforts of fossil fuel interests to hijack the UN climate process could be seen as a sign of hope. The industry understands that it is under threat. Following through on that threat, by insisting on a just transition to a safer energy system, is the task facing governments and the societies they represent.

The former UN climate chief Christiana Figueres is mentioned to show that________.

A

the UK goes the wrong way on carbon emissions

B

lack of funds is a barrier to decarbonization projects

C

the poor countries have built climate-resilient economies

D

the divisions between rich and poor nations have been removed

答案

B

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