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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Archie Bland

Friday briefing: The pressure is on at Cop29 to fill in the blanks in the climate finance deal

Cop29 president Mukhtar Babayev, left, speaking to lead negotiator Yalchin Rafiyev, centre, at the start of a plenary session in Baku, Azerbaijan, yesterday.
Cop29 president Mukhtar Babayev, left, speaking to lead negotiator Yalchin Rafiyev, centre, at the start of a plenary session in Baku, Azerbaijan, yesterday. Photograph: Murad Sezer/Reuters

Good morning. For a clear symbol of how much work lies ahead at what is supposed to be the last session of the Cop29 climate summit today, you only have to look at the figure included in the draft text on new climate finance for developing countries: “[X] trillion dollars”.

That placeholder on the most important single detail under consideration – included in two rival versions of the text – was supposed to leave space for negotiation. But it also suggests how much still has to be decided if any kind of positive momentum is to be rescued from two very difficult weeks in Azerbaijan.

A new text has been delayed, and is now expected at midday local time, about an hour from now. Meetings between governments and the summit leadership ran into early Friday morning: “There’s nothing like a 3am huddle in a windowless, airless room with bright lights and proposals on the future of Planet Earth to focus the mind,” wrote Ed King in his Climate Diplomacy newsletter this morning. But while there are huddled negotiators bickering over numbers and square brackets and semicolons, there is hope.

Today’s newsletter, with the Guardian’s Patrick Greenfield in Baku, is about how much is left to do, and how Cop29 might be viewed once it comes to an end. Here are the headlines.

Five big stories

  1. Israel | The international criminal court has issued arrest warrants for the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, the country’s former defence minister Yoav Gallant and the Hamas leader Mohammed Deif for alleged war crimes relating to the Gaza war. It is the first time that leaders of a democracy and western-aligned state have been charged by the court.

  2. Ukraine | Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the use of an experimental ballistic missile by Russia amounted to “a clear and severe escalation” in the war and called for worldwide condemnation of the move. Vladimir Putin said that the missile lauch “was a response to US plans to produce and deploy intermediate and short-range missiles”.

  3. US politics | Matt Gaetz, the former Florida congressman, withdrew from consideration to serve as Donald Trump’s attorney general on Thursday amid intense scrutiny of allegations of sexual misconduct. Later, Trump nominated former Florida state attorney general Pam Bondi in Gaetz’s place.

  4. Farming | New inheritance tax rules for farmers could be changed to make it easier for those 80 and over to hand down their farm without it incurring the tax, in what would be a partial climbdown by the government after a bruising row with farmers and a huge protest march in Westminster on Tuesday.

  5. Art | A banana bought for 35 cents and taped to a gallery wall with duct tape by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan has sold for $5.2m, making it surely the most expensive piece of edible fruit on the planet. One of three editions of the 2019 work was bought by crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun at Sotheby’s New York for four times the initial estimate.

In depth: ‘There has never been a finance target like this negotiated before’

Patrick was at the plenary session in Baku yesterday, where dozens of countries expressed their anger at the draft text that is supposed to be finalised ahead of an attempt at consensus agreement, theoretically by 6pm local time today. “It was pretty negative,” he said. “The biggest thing was the lack of a headline figure for climate finance. Developing countries say that they need a specific number to work with in negotiations. Meanwhile, the EU and other wealthier nations in that bloc are angry that there’s not enough emphasis on emissions cuts, which they say creates the risk of backsliding from what was agreed last year.”

“This kind of thing has happened before,” he added. “Cop presidencies [the role is currently held by this year’s host, Azerbaijan] sometimes see value in putting out a text that pisses everyone off to heighten the appetite for compromise.”

But it’s a high stakes game. Here’s what you need to know.

***

What are the big issues on the table?

The headline goal of the summit in Azerbaijan is a deal on climate finance – specifically the “new collective quantified goal” (NCQG) mandated by the 2015 Paris agreement, whichis now meant to be set in stone. (Read more about that in Nimo’s First Edition from the start of the summit.) The current goal of $100bn a year for poor countries is viewed even in rich countries as inadequate, but the ask of about $1.3tn a year by 2030 is still subject to negotiation – in terms of the headline figure, how it is paid and which countries qualify as recipients.

“There has been no concrete counterproposal from the developed nations on a figure yet,” Patrick said. And even when a number materialises, there will be scrutiny of how much of the money comes in direct financial assistance and how much is in the form of private sector investment or money from fossil fuel taxes.

“Then there is the debate over who is still a developing country, and whether India, China and others qualify – even Saudi Arabia is included in a bloc of developing countries. When you talk to negotiators from African countries, a lot of them are frustrated that the investment often goes to places that already have it, like Egypt, Morocco and Vietnam, as well as India and China – and they are not in position to attract a significant slice.”

Meanwhile, there is a battle over “mitigation” – the term for commitments to curbing greenhouse gas emissions. In Baku last week, Saudi Arabia and its allies sought to unpick commitments made at Cop28 to “transition away from fossil fuels”, and the key question is whether that pledge will be reiterated in this year’s agreement. “That is what most countries say they want,” Patrick said. “But the group led by the Saudis is resisting that approach behind the scenes.” At the moment, the phrase “transition away from fossil fuels” is absent from the section of the draft dealing with mitigation.

***

How have talks gone so far?

Even with a good faith approach from every country involved, this is very difficult stuff. “There has never been a finance target like this negotiated before,” Patrick said. And while $1.3tn is in one sense a lot cheaper than the accumulating cost of the climate crisis, “it’s also equivalent to the combined military budgets of the US and China – so it’s a really serious amount of money. We shouldn’t expect it to be easy. It’s a personal view, but when you view the talks up close, it doesn’t feel as hopeless as it maybe does when you’re not here.”

Even so, “there’s not a lot of trust on display,” Patrick added. One key area of frustration is the leadership of Azerbaijan, which has been accused of using the summit to boost its fossil fuel industry. Ilham Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s president, recently called oil and gas a “gift from god” and said that countries should not be blamed for “bringing these resources to the market”. And Azerbaijan is on track for a major expansion in fossil gas production over the next decade.

“This is the third Cop in a row at a major fossil fuel producing state,” Patrick said. “The Emiratis dealt with that tension pretty well last time, and they had an impressive diplomatic operation – but Azerbaijan doesn’t really have that in place. Now they have gone to the British and the Brazilians, as lead representatives of the developed and developing world who have either hosted a Cop summit recently or will do soon, to help them put together a new draft of the text.”

But regardless of who Azerbaijan brings into the drafting process, many delegates suspect that they are simply too committed to fossil fuel production to be a fair broker for the difficult day ahead. Meanwhile, the shadow of a second Donald Trump presidency, and the sense that the US will once again abdicate its responsibilities on the climate crisis, only heightens the pressure on the process.

***

How will the process work today?

In 2022, Fiona Harvey gave us a fascinating rundown of the negotiation process ahead of Cop27, explaining how the first week is made up of negotiations between officials, followed by ministerial appearances in the second week, and then the final plenary session at which consensus must be reached for a deal to be locked in. In short, Fiona said then: “It’s awful and inadequate and frustrating, but it’s still essential.”

The final stage of the process follows a logic of its own. Ahead of the final plenary session, delegations from different countries and blocs will hold private consultations with the presidency on what they feel needs to change in the text for them to agree to it. Once a text has been hammered out, agreement must be by unanimous decision, and if no consensus can be reached there is no option of a majority vote as a last resort.

Some argue that this mechanism enforces the “will of the laggards” who always have the option of junking the whole deal; others say that it forces those working to sabotage agreement behind the scenes to show their hand, and that sometimes they can be shamed into acquiescence.

Either way, the process is notorious for running over. “My flight home’s at 7am on Sunday, and I don’t expect it to be done by then,” Patrick said. “But we’ll see.”

***

How important is this year’s Cop likely to prove?

That really depends on what the final agreement says. A deal that locks in a big increase in climate finance from the developed world to the developing world would be a major milestone, and it would be a victory for climate realists to repeat the Cop28 language about fossil fuels. Backsliding from the Cop28 commitments would be a real setback, and developing countries’ limited faith in the process would be further damaged if the finance commitments are underwhelming.

Whatever happens, there is always next year. And, on the other hand, there is also the reality that keeping global heating to 1.5C above preindustrial levels already appears to be a very remote prospect. “A large majority of scientists think that 1.5 is already dead and buried,” Patrick said. “That is massively consequential. But it doesn’t mean that efforts to limit warming shouldn’t continue” – both because it is a commitment that governments have signed up to, and because this is not a binary: every fraction of a degree of additional warming will have profound consequences.

Even if an encouraging deal is struck today or over the weekend, and the Cop bandwagon stays on the road, that should not be mistaken for a concrete result. “The process doesn’t need countries to leave it, or to ‘fail’, for warming to go well beyond 2C,” Patrick said. “Whatever happens in Baku, it’s ultimately only important if it leads to action.”

What else we’ve been reading

  • After the death of John Prescott, Stephen Bates’s fine obituary captures something of his crucial role in the success of New Labour - but also his remarkable path to the top, and how sensitive he was to classist mockery in the press. Archie

  • From the outside, having an irrational fear of everyday objects might seem absurd and amusing. For those experiencing such phobias, the emotional distress is far from entertaining. Emine Saner asked sufferers how these fears shape their daily lives. Nimo

  • Towns like Mansfield have become a cliche for those seeking tales of “left-behind England”, writes Aditya Chakrabortty – but the warehouse workers and couriers who make up the post-industrial working class are often ignored. His piece, which tells the story of one Amazon worker in Mansfield with devastating health problems, is a powerful corrective. Archie

  • Delving into the pronatalist movement in the US, Josh Toussaint-Strauss takes a look at the politicisation of birthrates in this informative Guardian video. Nimo

  • Lisa O’Carroll examines the ongoing tensions in a small Irish town over a camp for asylum seekers, one year after anti-immigrant riots rocked the country. Nimo

Sport

Football | Lina Hurtig’s late poke-in ensured Arsenal secured a spot in the Champions League knockout stage with two group games remaining, a 1-0 win over Juventus. For Manchester City, two goals from Khadija Shaw against Hammarby were enough to ensure the team’s qualification for the quarter-finals.

Football | Pep Guardiola has signed a new two-year contract with Manchester City that will extend his tenure as the manager to 2027, and has said the champions’ current bad form stopped him leaving in the upcoming summer. Guardiola said: “I didn’t want to let the club down.”

Formula One | Drivers are losing confidence in the FIA and the governing body’s president, ­Mohammed Ben Sulayem, after receiving no response to their ­collective criticism of both in a ­public statement. They had called for dialogue to address their grievances over punishments for swearing and financial transparency but the FIA has not replied since it was issued two weeks ago.

The front pages

“ICC arrest warrant for Netanyahu over Gaza” is the Guardian’s lead story, which is also covered elsewhere. “Starmer supports arrest of Netanyahu” is the splash on the Telegraph, while the Financial Times leads with “Hague court issues arrest warrant for Netanyahu over ‘war crimes’ in Gaza” and the Times says “Israeli leader faces arrest if he flies into Britain”.

The i highlights developments in the Ukraine war, running the headline “UK and France will stand firm against Putin, vows Lammy”, as does the Mirror with “Kremlin warning to Britain: You Are In The War”.

The Metro focuses on a suspected methanol poisoning death in Laos splashing with “Brit Lawyer Dies From Methanol In Drink”. At the Mail the lead story is “Ed Miliband To Slap Green ‘Tax’ On Your Boiler”, while the Express says: “Labour Hands Over Cash To Foreign Farmers”. And the Sun claims “Dodgy Haircut Is Hate Crime”.

Something for the weekend

Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read and listen to right now

Music
Father John Misty: Mahashmashana | ★★★★☆
You could argue that Mahashmashana is not an album built to change anyone’s mind: if you’ve already decided that Josh Tillman is an insufferable smartarse, you can doubtless find evidence to support your claim among its dense, allusive songs. But you’d have a harder time arguing that he’s not a fantastic writer in terms of melody – all of the tracks bear a tune that’s both beautiful and beautifully constructed – and the scope of his musical ambitions … for a man who apparently spends a lot of time consumed by angst and portents of doom, Tillman seems to be doing just fine. Alexis Petridis

TV
A Man on the Inside | ★★★★☆
A Man on the Inside is the story of Charles (Ted Danson), a lonely, retired widower who takes a job with a private investigator, infiltrating a retirement home to discover the identity of a thief. Only, as you may have guessed, the job gives him purpose and the residents give him companionship and everything is lovely and sweet and heartwarming. Stuart Heritage

Film
Snow Leopard | ★★★★☆
The Tibetan writer-director Pema Tseden died of heart failure last year at age 53, just months after completing this movie; his health was almost certainly weakened by rough treatment from Chinese police some years earlier. He was not an overtly political film-maker and this is not an overtly political film; nor was the incident that may well have led to his death an overtly political incident. And yet the political implications of power are everywhere in his final film about the rescue of an illegally captured snow leopard; the meanings are transformed and displaced into these characters and incidents. It’s a strange, sad swan song. Peter Bradshaw

Today in Focus

Nigel Farage and his ‘historic mission’: on the ground with Reform UK

Today in Focus presenter Helen Pidd goes out on the road – to Birmingham, Stalybridge and Clacton – to chart Nigel Farage’s bid to transform Reform UK into a modern, professional political party

The Upside

A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

When Kelly Dyer started playing ice hockey as a child in Massachusetts, there was no such thing as women’s kit, so she had to wear her brother’s gear on the rink. By the time she played for Team USA in the inaugural women’s world championships in 1990, she noticed that even the sport’s top female stars were still wearing ill-fitting equipment designed for men.

So she set about changing things: “I was so full of energy and visions of where women’s sports could go. I just picked up the phone and called every single hockey manufacturer.” Dyer eventually persuaded a Candian company to make women’s hockey gear, prompting the Chicago Tribune to write, in 1996: “Makers of sports equipment have finally realized there’s another sex.”

Bored at work?

And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

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