Climate finance isn't charity, says Bhupender Yadav at COP26

PTI Updated - November 11, 2021 at 12:45 PM.

This is an obligation, responsibility, duty and a vow, says the Environment Minister

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - NOVEMBER 10: Bhupender Yadav, India's Union Cabinet Minister of Labour and Employment, Environment, Forest and Climate Change gives a media interview on day eleven of the COP26 at SECC on November 10, 2021 in Glasgow, Scotland. Day eleven of the 2021 climate summit in Glasgow will focus on driving the global transition to zero-emission transport. This is the 26th "Conference of the Parties" and represents a gathering of all the countries signed on to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Climate Agreement. The aim of this year's conference is to commit countries to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. (Photo by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)

Environment and climate minister Bhupender Yadav says rich countries have “an obligation, responsibility, duty and a vow” to provide climate finance to developing nations and should deliver on an unfulfilled promise to raise $100 billion a year.

In an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press, Yadav said addressing the shortcomings on finance was paramount to making the UN climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, a success.

“I believe the biggest responsibility ... lies with the developed countries," Yadav said. "Because if there is any gap that remains it is in the action for climate finance.” Yadav heads the Indian delegation at the two-week talks scheduled to end Friday. A draft deal under negotiation noted “with regret” that rich nations had failed to meet their promise to provide $100 billion each year in climate finance to poor nations as of 2020.

Currently, rich nations provide an estimated $80 billion annually, which poorer nations say isn't enough to develop clean energy systems and to adapt to worsening climate shocks. India alone said it needs $2.5 trillion, in a 2019 finance ministry document.

“Climate finance isn't charity," Yadav said on the sidelines of the conference. “This is an obligation, responsibility, duty and a vow.” He said helping the developing world cope with climate change is a call of conscience that "should be in the heart of every person. But especially in those who've a greater historical responsibility than others.” The minister said India — a country with nearly 1.4 billion people or almost one-fifth of the global population and yet accounting for just 5 per cent of its emissions — is among the few countries in the world on track to meet its climate targets before 2030.

However, emissions analysts say India should have more ambitious targets to help put the world on track to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the goal of the U.N. climate negotiations.

Target

India recently announced it would stop adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere by 2070 — two decades after the “net zero” target set by the US and 10 years after that of China. It has also promised to get half of its energy from clean energy and rein in its emissions growth by 2030.

But to achieve those goals, developing nations like India need financing.

India has been reluctant to commit to phasing out coal-fired power plants — the largest single source of human-caused emissions. The dirty fuel is crucial for producing electricity in the country where millions still don't have access to it, and energy is crucial for development.

The draft on Wednesday also called for accelerating the phasing out of coal — the largest source of emissions — but didn't set a timeline.

Asked about coal phaseouts, Yadav said "we are not phasing anything out completely right now. We will move towards our green energy, as per our national needs.”

Published on November 11, 2021 07:15