COP29: Clean power must offer more hope to wean nations off fossil fuels

Rich nations struggle to offer compelling alternatives, highlighting the need for a substantial global investment in clean energy for developing countries.

You can regard the depressing denouement of the COP29 climate conference in Azerbaijan at the weekend as a sort of diplomatic echo of the US election result three weeks earlier.

In the US, progressives found themselves blocked by a surprisingly strong coalition of both traditional Republicans, and a faction of working class and non-White supporters whom they’d regarded, perhaps naively, as their natural allies.

At the United Nations climate conference in Baku, rich nations found that efforts to reduce their own emissions and fund climate programs elsewhere in the world bought them little favor with developing countries most at risk of global warming.

Both situations are powerful examples of aspirational politics.

Since the 19th century, conservatives have marketed themselves to the electorate by arguing that their policies were the best way to achieve the wealth and independence sought by working-class voters.

Those opposed to climate action make a similar pitch to low and middle-income nations: Environmentalism is a protectionist plot to keep poor nations poor.

Only fossil fuels can provide the development you need to grow wealthy.

Rich nations can never do enough to repay the carbon debt they’ve incurred.

It’s a potent argument because there’s a grain of truth to it. Consider the 86 countries the World Bank considers to be “high income.

” After the traditional colonial powers of Europe, Japan, North America, and Oceania and their immediate neighbors in the Caribbean and Eastern Europe, the largest grouping are all petroleum exporters.

Web Development JavaScript Essentials: Unlock AI-Driven Insights with ChatGPT By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Web Development C++ Fundamentals for Absolute Beginners By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Finance A2Z Of Finance: Finance Beginner Course By - elearnmarkets, Financial Education by StockEdge View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Tabnine AI Masterclass: Optimize Your Coding Efficiency By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Java Programming with ChatGPT: Learn using Generative AI By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Web Development Intermediate C++ Skills: Master Pointers, Structures and File Stream By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Leadership From Idea to Product: A Startup Development Guide By - Dr. Anu Khanchandani, Startup Coach with more than 25 years of experience View Program Leadership Boosting Startup Revenue with 6 AI-Powered Sales Automation Techniques By - Dr. Anu Khanchandani, Startup Coach with more than 25 years of experience View Program Marketing Marketing & Sales Strategies for Startups: From Concept to Conversion By - Dr. Anu Khanchandani, Startup Coach with more than 25 years of experience View Program Marketing Modern Marketing Masterclass by Seth Godin By - Seth Godin, Former dot com Business Executive and Best Selling Author View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) AI and Analytics based Business Strategy By - Tanusree De, Managing Director- Accenture Technology Lead, Trustworthy AI Center of Excellence: ATCI View Program Data Science SQL Server Bootcamp 2024: Transform from Beginner to Pro By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Office Productivity Mastering Google Sheets: Unleash the Power of Excel and Advance Analysis By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Basics of Generative AI: Unveiling Tomorrow's Innovations By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Data Science MySQL for Beginners: Learn Data Science and Analytics Skills By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Finance AI and Generative AI for Finance By - Hariom Tatsat, Vice President- Quantitative Analytics at Barclays View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) AI for Everyone: Understanding and Applying the Basics on Artificial Intelligence By - Ritesh Vajariya, Generative AI Expert View Program Marketing Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel By - Neil Patel, Co-Founder and Author at Neil Patel Digital Digital Marketing Guru View Program Thanks to oil, the Arabian peninsula — a region that had been barely governable in the 13 centuries since the death of the Prophet Muhammad — now has the diplomatic clout to make or break climate policies.

To countries still climbing the development ladder, the rapid growth of China and India (which together burn 70% of the world’s coal) looks like an attractive advert for a similar fossil-fired road to wealth.

Against that backdrop, global summits, like democratic elections, often come down to judgement calls about which side is most likely to enrich those at the bottom of the heap.

Wealthy, climate-conscious countries need to accept that they’ve been losing that argument.

Consider the haggling over upgrading the $100 billion in climate finance per year promised at the 2009 Copenhagen meeting to $300 billion a decade hence.

The sum is a pittance compared to the trillions needed, as my colleague Mark Gongloff has written, especially when one considers how little is new funding and how much consists of standard loans.

More to the point, it’s also failing to compete with the hard-money allure of fossil-intensive development.

Gabon, a central African member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, is a case in point.

With 2.5 million people, it often receives as much foreign direct investment as the Democratic Republic of Congo, home to more than 100 million.

Or take Guyana, the world’s fastest-growing nation.

It took in more FDI last year than Taiwan or the Philippines, and twice as much as the entire Caribbean.

Of the $31.3 billion in FDI that went to the 45 least developed countries in 2023, more than a third flowed to seven nations — Chad, Mauritania, Mozambique, Senegal, Sudan, Uganda, and Tanzania — which are operating or building petroleum export projects.

What can rich nations offer as a substitute? The advantage of petroleum is that oilfields and terminals both borrow money and earn export revenues in US dollars, immunizing them against the currency crises that plague poor countries.

If you used greenbacks in 2021 to finance a wind farm outside Cairo, you’d have been in trouble this year when the Egyptian pound fell to about a third of its value back then.

There’s little prospect that your consumers will be able to pay electricity tariffs high enough to cover your interest payments.

The best answer is for rich nations to recognize that climate change is truly a crisis, and act accordingly.

A $650 billion issuance in 2021 of the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights — an obscure quasi-currency mostly known only to central bankers — played a decisive but unheralded role in cushioning poor countries against the damage from Covid-19. Some $69 billion of the total is now being diverted to climate funding.

What’s needed is a far more dramatic program for poor countries to buy the vast numbers of solar panels, batteries and wind turbines the world can produce.

Those funds might not generate a good return in the strictest financial sense.

The benefit the world will get if every country is able to industrialize and grow wealthy on the back of clean energy, however, will be vastly greater.

Nominations for ET MSME Awards are now open.

The last day to apply is November 30, 2024.

Click here to submit your entry for any one or more of the 22 categories and stand a chance to win a prestigious award.

Recent Search
Top Search
+