It’s crunch time for a climate agreement, and negotiators in Paris are preparing to work through the night to hammer out remaining differences before the conference officially ends on Friday. The draft text released Wednesday stands at a more readable 29 pages, down from the previous draft’s 43 pages. And yet, even though disagreements in the text were pared down about 75 percent since Saturday, the whole agreement is still up for debate—the first word all the way to the last technically appears in brackets.
The remaining issues center around what kind of long-term target the world settles on, and whether that includes a stricter goal of a 1.5-degree ceiling on warming. Finance, as well as loss and damage (how developed countries will assist vulnerable ones harmed by climate change), remain two of the sections with the most work to be done.
Paris has at least gotten this far. At the last major conference in Copenhagen, things by this point had “completely broken down,” says Michael Jacobs of the New Climate Economy project. “The text is cleaner than I thought it would be at this stage, and the mood is incomparably better than Copenhagen. But the issues that are clean in the text are the low hanging fruits, those that are not are higher up the tree.”
Here’s our progress report on COP21. Blue bars indicate progress toward the goals, compared to yesterday, red bars indicate backward momentum, and gray bars indicate no change:
Here’s a roundup of the biggest news from around the conference:
- Jonathan M. Katz, reporting from Paris, explains how the rich are working to stay rich. (New Republic)
- The latest draft agreement is down to 29 pages, and negotiators have done away with about 75 percent of bracketed disagreements, but questions remain over finance and the text’s ambition. (New Republic)
- Andrew Freedman provides a helpful annotated version of the latest draft. Toggle between the biggest topics on the right. (Mashable)
- President Obama has been working the phones to secure a successful deal. (New York Times)
- It’s too soon to say whether we’ve reached peak emissions. (New Republic)
- John Kerry said in a speech at the conference that the U.S. accepts responsibility for contributing to climate change, and would double its adaptation pledge to $800 million. (New Republic)
- Kerry sees progress in working with developing nations, but the U.S. is still resistant to accepting legal liability for “loss and damage.” (E&E Publishing)
- The negotiations have not considered keeping fossil fuels in the ground, but focusing on extraction as well as emissions would make for a more ambitious agreement. (Grist)
- Obama has recognized that keeping fossil fuels in the ground will help slow climate change, and recently postponed the auction of oil and gas leases. But only until the spring. (CityLab)
- Permafrost—frozen soil that leaks methane and CO2 as it thaws—could throw a wrench in the climate talks and current carbon budgets. (Washington Post)
- The Russians have promised not to spoil a Paris agreement, but that could depend on whether negotiators give them the proper attention at the conference. (E&E Publishing)
- A “high ambition coalition” of over 100 countries has emerged as a strong player at the conference, pushing for a legally binding deal that requires nations to reassess goals every five years. (The Guardian)
Read our previous progress reports: