The 29th Conference of Parties (COP29) threatens to go into overtime as negotiators struggle to agree on climate finance. The United Nations Climate Change Conference is supposed to wrap up in Baku, Azerbaijan, today but up to late last night, negotiators were still unclear on a way forward to compromise. New text from the COP29 presidency is expected to be released this morning in Baku though several negotiators from small island states are pessimistic it will draw both sides of the divide closer.
During an interview with Guardian Media yesterday, incoming chair of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) Ilana Seid said, “We think it’s been disappointing. Generally in most COPs we see delayed tactics and then things tend to kick into gear three days before but we haven’t seen that happen yet. We got text last night and this morning and there’s nothing we can agree to. Everybody is unhappy, particularly on NCQG (new collective quantified goal) we are negotiating a blank bracket and that was the headline of this COP. So we think the presidency has to step up its efforts but we’re very concerned that we’re headed to a low ambition COP.”
Seid said most of the AOSIS delegation is scheduled to leave Baku tomorrow and she is concerned they will not have enough representatives in the negotiating room. She said it would be unfortunate if the COP doesn’t have an outcome. “I think we’re going to get there but we’re going to have to run really fast,” she added.
When pressed on whether the outcome of the COP truly matters for SIDS given that Global North countries have failed to deliver on pledges in the past, Seid said, “I think that is a frustration for a lot of countries but we also have to recognise that the Paris Agreement has accomplished quite a bit. Without it, we would be in a much different place globally. Yes, sometimes things aren’t delivered but we also have to realise that the alternative is much worse.”
Seid, who is from Palau, is set to take up the chair of AOSIS next year. Asked about her plans for the next two years in which she will be chair, she said, “Depending on what happens at this COP we want to increase mitigation ambition and also access to adaptation funding for SIDS. Next year we really want NDCs to be wrapped up. I think that’s an outcome that we really hope for in Brazil. We are already having plans to speak to Brazil presidency early in March to assist where priorities are communicated but then to also prepare the team for the COP next year, so we’re funded and we have the staff to fight and we’re there in large numbers.”
AOSIS makes up 20 per cent of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) block.