As talks by nearly 200 nations progressing in Rwandan capital on phasing down of harmful refrigerant gas reaches mid-way, New Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) released an analysis to support India's proposal as general consensus seems to be emerging within the A5 parties (developing nations) at the Conference here to have a dual baseline for climate damaging gas Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs).
"Now by having a new baseline of 2024-26, it is becoming 52 billion tonnes CO2e. Despite showing this much flexibility, developed countries still want India and other developing countries to move to a baseline of 2020-22," he said.
The baseline is the year against which each country's consumption of HFCs is capped.
Countries will have to reduce HFCs from that capped amount.
India's proposal was supported by a group of developing countries.
In the ongoing negotiations, one group of developing countries, that includes China, seems to favour 2020-22 as the baseline.
The analysis done by CSE shows that quibbling over the 2020-22/ 2024-26 baseline for developing nations is not worthwhile to achieve an ambitious HFC amendment.
Bhushan, a climate expert, alleged that pressure is being put by the A2 parties (developed countries) on the developing nations to accept the 2020-22 baseline.
(Reopens FGN 17)
CSE said its analysis was done using the recently released the UNEP Technology and Economic Assessment Panel (TEAP) data.
Analysing the issue in different scenarios, the CSE said, when all developing countries have 2020-22 as baseline, the climate benefit is about 64 billion tonne CO2e.
The climate benefit under Scenario 2 is almost two times the climate benefit under the Indian amendment proposal and similar to the EU proposal.
Noting that China is the single most important factor in determining the climate benefit as it has already favored 2020-22 as its baseline, the analysis shows that "if another group of A5 countries decides to have 2024-26 as the baseline, the shift will have insignificant impact on the climate benefit."
Accusing the A2 parties for dragging the talks on baseline issue of developing nations, CSE said, "There are many more important issues to be resolved including finance, IPR, technology transfer, energy efficiency etc."
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