Connect with us

News

Women in the world’s richest nations feel let down by their governments following the pandemic, CNN poll reveals

Published

on

Women in the world’s richest nations feel let down by their governments following the pandemic, CNN poll reveals

(CNN) — A mean of greater than 60% of girls residing in G7 international locations whose lives had been modified by the Covid-19 pandemic say their governments didn’t present them with a lot of the assist they wanted to cope with these modifications, in keeping with a far-reaching new ballot by CNN.

These unique findings come in opposition to the backdrop of quite a few experiences exhibiting that girls have been extra adversely affected by the coronavirus pandemic than males and ensuing pledges to construct again higher touted by leaders all over the world. 

CNN’s survey finds that though each women and men in G7 international locations who skilled disruption to their lives brought on by the pandemic felt they had been largely unsupported by their governments, the sentiment is extra pronounced amongst ladies.

In none of those seven international locations did a majority of those ladies say they obtained quantity or extra of the assist that they wanted.

Advertisement

An absence of presidency assist

Girls whose lives had been modified by the pandemic had been, on common, 4 share factors much less doubtless than males who confronted modifications to say their native authorities offered no less than quantity of the assist they wanted, and about seven share factors much less more likely to say their nationwide authorities offered comparable ranges of assist.

Amongst ladies who say their lives had been modified throughout the pandemic, a mean of 31% say their native authorities offered no less than quantity of assist in coping with these modifications, whereas this determine was 35% amongst males. With regards to assist offered by nationwide governments, a mean 33% of these ladies say they obtained no less than quantity of assist, in contrast with 40% amongst these males.

The divide is especially notable within the UK, France, and Italy. In these three international locations, the proportion of people that skilled modifications and say they obtained no less than quantity of assist from their native authorities was 26% of girls and 38% of males within the UK, 26% of girls, and 39% of males in France and 29% of girls and 40% of males in Italy.

For the proportion of people that skilled modifications and say they obtained no less than quantity of assist from their nationwide authorities these figures had been 30% of girls and 45% of males within the UK, 29% of girls and 42% of males in France, and 29% of girls and 44% of males in Italy.

Of the G7 nations, Canada carried out greatest, with 41% of girls who skilled modifications saying they felt supported by their native authorities and 47% by their nationwide authorities. 

Advertisement

Not solely did ladies not really feel supported on common throughout the seven international locations, they had been additionally usually extra sad than males with their governments’ dealing with of the pandemic.

Canada once more fared higher, with round 55% of girls score their authorities’s dealing with of the pandemic positively.

Nevertheless, lower than half of girls within the different six nations accredited, with the remaining disapproving or uncertain. In most, their impression of their authorities’s response to Covid-19 was considerably worse than that of males.  

Girls are usually extra sad than males with their governments’ dealing with of the pandemic

% of men and women who approve their authorities’s dealing with of the pandemic

The place ladies say they’re hurting most

Proof had already begun to emerge in 2020 and extra in 2021 of the disruptions to ladies’s lives brought on by the pandemic.

Advertisement

The Worldwide Labour Group reported that 13 million fewer ladies would return to the workforce; knowledge collected by UN Girls discovered that in 13 international locations the world over the pandemic “elevated ladies’s experiences of violence and eroded their emotions of security”; and, per life earlier than the pandemic, ladies had been nonetheless bearing the burden of care disproportionately to males, spending on common a further 5.2 hours per week on childcare, in comparison with 3.5 for males.

CNN’s findings reveals the place precisely ladies within the G7 say they’re notably hurting now.

Throughout the G7, a mean of 81% of girls say the pandemic triggered no less than some modifications to their lives. Of those ladies, a mean of 71% ladies stated these modifications had been largely unfavourable, with 37% testifying that these modifications had been main.

Nearly all features of girls’s on a regular basis lives have been disrupted, with the highest 5 areas of disruption being: future planning, group (their relationships with shut household and pals), psychological well being, entry to healthcare and their monetary stability.

How ladies within the G7 rank the principle areas of disruption to their lives

% of respondents who say the pandemic triggered no less than a minor disruption to…

Advertisement

Males Girls

A examine printed within the Lancet final week pointed to “intensified ranges of pre-existing widespread inequalities” following the pandemic and located that girls in most components of the world had been extra more likely to report employment loss, say they needed to forego work to look after others, had been extra more likely to drop out of college than their male counterparts and noticed elevated ranges of gender-based violence between March 2020 and September 2021.

However in every of the G7 international locations, the CNN survey discovered most girls didn’t really feel their gender exacerbated the challenges they confronted regardless of the disruptions wrought by the pandemic – they had been, nonetheless, extra more likely to report a gender differential. 

On common 79% of males stated that women and men confronted the identical challenges. This determine was 73% for girls. Girls had been additionally usually extra more likely to say that that they had the harder time throughout the pandemic (18% of girls stated that on common vs. 12% of males).

Girls in G7 international locations extra doubtless than males to note a gender distinction in terms of the affect of the pandemic

We requested: Do you assume the pandemic has been harder for girls or for males, or has it been equally troublesome for each?

Advertisement

Tougher for males
Equally troublesome for each
Tougher for girls
No opinion

Canada

What males stated

What ladies stated

France

Advertisement

What males stated

What ladies stated

Germany

What males stated

What ladies stated

Advertisement

Italy

What males stated

What ladies stated

Japan

What males stated

Advertisement

What ladies stated

UK

What males stated

What ladies stated

US

Advertisement

What males stated

What ladies stated

The CNN ballot discovered ladies’s private experiences of the pandemic differ considerably, with demographics corresponding to race and earnings partly shaping what affect Covid-19 had on their life. In the US, as an illustration, ladies of colour had been extra doubtless than white ladies to say the pandemic had affected their monetary stability (68% in comparison with 52%), though they had been additionally extra more likely to say that they had seen optimistic modifications of their lives due to the pandemic (38% to twenty-eight%).

Variations from throughout international locations additionally go some technique to explaining why the outcomes of the CNN ballot could differ from wider reported traits.

The G7 are a number of the world’s richest international locations and most of the extra vital impacts of the pandemic had been ones exacerbated by poverty.

Advertisement

Individuals who lived in international locations with poor well being infrastructure, weaker schooling techniques, extra overcrowded dwellings and the lack to change to working from house threat better long-term hurt.

As professor of worldwide research at Brown College, Nadje Al-Ali wrote on Covid-19 and feminism within the International South: “The pandemic threatens to create long-term gaps by way of women’ schooling in addition to ladies’s participation in formal paid labor, which in flip dangers strengthening conventional patriarchal gender norms and the division of labor inside the family and the economic system.”

Trying to the long run

As international locations drop Covid-19 restrictions, and efforts are as a substitute diverted to reviving economies, CNN requested ladies throughout the G7 what their consolation ranges had been with residing with the coronavirus, and to establish what the most important issues they nonetheless face are. 

Two years after Covid-19 introduced the world to a standstill, half or extra ladies in every of the international locations surveyed say that it’s time to be taught to reside with the virus, somewhat than focus totally on stopping its unfold. Although the diploma to which they favor this sentiment does differ.

In France, Germany, and the UK, ladies are extra doubtless than males to say it’s time to reside with the virus; within the US and Japan, ladies are barely extra doubtless than males to say stopping Covid ought to stay the precedence. Canada and Italy see much less pronounced gender divides on this query. 

Advertisement

Requested to select the most important downside presently dealing with them and their quick households, inflation and the price of residing tops the record for girls in 5 of the seven international locations surveyed: the UK (64%), France (63%), the US (61%), Canada (56%) and Germany (44%).  In Italy, different financial considerations (24%) barely edge out inflation (21%). Japan is the one nation the place ladies price Covid as their largest downside (at 34%), with inflation and the price of residing coming in second at 22%.

Fewer than one-tenth of girls in any of the international locations say their high considerations are associated to housing, or to offering care for youngsters or different relations. 

In six of the G7 nations, the place inflation and different financial considerations are on the forefront of girls’s minds, a majority of girls say their authorities shouldn’t be doing sufficient to handle their foremost considerations: 58% in Italy, 62% in Germany, 66% in each France and Canada, 67% within the UK and 77% within the US.

In Japan, the place the primary concern is Covid-19, fewer than half of girls — 47% — say the federal government is doing too little to assist. 

Inflation and the price of residing tops the record of girls’s present-day considerations

We requested ladies: which of the next areas would you say is the most important downside dealing with you and your quick household proper now?

Advertisement

Inflation and value of residing Covid-19 Financial and monetary points Well being Housing Offering care No opinion

Inflation and value of residing

Covid-19

Financial and monetary points

Well being

Advertisement

Housing

Offering care

No opinion

In a suggestions to the “leaders of the G7”, printed in June 2021, the G7’s Gender Equality Advisory Council wrote about “the disproportionate impact of Covid-19 on ladies and women globally,” and known as for “a pandemic response and restoration that takes account of the wants of girls and women and tracks the impact of restoration initiatives on women and men, taking into consideration elements corresponding to age, earnings, incapacity and ethnicity.”

But the outcomes of CNN’s unique ballot reveals a niche between what the G7 leaders have been saying — about “constructing again extra equal… in a extra gender impartial, extra female method”, or that “when ladies are higher off, we’re higher off” – and what ladies really feel about their lives and prospects because the pandemic started. 

Advertisement

Methodology

CNN As Equals’ polls had been performed on-line amongst adults in G7 international locations. America survey was performed by SSRS between 23 February and 26 February amongst 1,002 folks initially recruited utilizing probability-based strategies. Surveys in Canada (1,011 adults), France (1,051 adults), Germany (1,061 adults), Italy (1,063 adults), Japan (1,063 adults) and the UK (1,095 adults) had been performed on-line by Savanta ComRes between 25 February and a pair of March. Outcomes for the US survey have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.2 share factors, leads to Canada have an error margin of plus or minus 3.1 factors, and it’s 3.0 factors for outcomes from France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the UK.

News

Starbucks pares hedging programme despite coffee market surge

Published

on

Starbucks pares hedging programme despite coffee market surge

Starbucks has slashed its use of hedges against coffee price shocks even as the price of beans has soared, raising concerns that it may be unusually exposed to market swings. 

The world’s largest café chain held less than $200mn worth of fixed-price contracts for so-called green, or unroasted, coffee at the end of its fiscal year in September, according to its newly filed annual report, down from $1bn as recently as 2019. 

The decline has occurred at a time when roasters confront supply deficits after persistently poor crops in major exporters such as Brazil. Benchmark coffee futures rose above $3 a pound in New York on Friday to a 13-year high, following a more than 70 per cent gain in the past 12 months. 

Starbucks buys 3 per cent of the world’s coffee to supply its 40,000 cafés and retail businesses. A team based in Lausanne, Switzerland manages purchasing high-quality arabica beans under a subsidiary named the Starbucks Coffee Trading Company. The decline in the value of its fixed-price contracts has attracted attention on Wall Street. 

“They are substantially less hedged than they used to be. It makes the next 12 months of coffee prices more important than they’ve ever been,” said Gregory Francfort, a restaurant analyst at Guggenheim Securities.   

Advertisement

New Starbucks chief executive Brian Niccol is in the the early stages of a plan to revive flagging sales at cafés. One of his goals is to restore its appeal as a community coffee house. “At Starbucks, coffee comes first,” he said in video remarks last month. 

The company is not alone among roasters in letting price-cover slip during an explosive market rally. Data from the US commodity futures regulator shows commercial traders have sharply reduced their contracts to buy arabica.

A coffee trader familiar with Starbucks’ operations says the majority of its purchases are made with so-called “price-to-be-fixed” contracts, which establish a quantity, delivery month and the amount of price premium to New York’s futures market. The final purchase price is agreed later.

“When a market rallies significantly and quickly, as coffee has done, the roasting community in general tends to let coverage decline,” the trader said.

Starbucks’ 56 “tier one” suppliers range from global commodities trading houses such as Louis Dreyfus and Olam to farmer co-operatives. The company in 2021 said it bought 800mn lbs of coffee annually — an amount that would cost $2.4bn at current benchmark prices. 

Advertisement

Starbucks had $1.1bn in green coffee purchase obligations on its books as of September, according to its annual report.

The company buys green coffee using two types of contracts: fixed-price and price-to-be-fixed, according to its annual report. For the latter, the company also uses derivatives contracts to insure against market gyrations. 

Line chart of $mn showing Starbucks cuts value of 'fixed-price' coffee purchases

“Like others, right now we’re remaining agile in a very dynamic market,” Starbucks said in response to questions. “An example of that agility is that our current priced coverage is slightly lower than our typical range of 9-18 months.”  

Starbucks executives rarely discuss coffee hedging with Wall Street, but in 2021 — another period of furious price rises — then-CEO Kevin Johnson told analysts the company purchased 12 to 18 months in advance, and at the time had locked in prices for the next 14 months.

“We may be the only large buyer of green coffee that uses this approach, and that will serve us well as it gives us a significant advantage relative to our competitors who, if they don’t buy this far in advance, will certainly not have that cost structure that we put in place,” he said.

The value of Starbucks’ price-to-be-fixed contracts has fluctuated, ending the fiscal year in September at $929mn, according to the annual report.

Advertisement

That sum was more than a year ago, but well below levels of 2021 and 2022. Coffee derivatives contracts held by Starbucks were worth $154mn, the lowest September value since 2020. 

Starbucks’ coffee trading operation is headed by Andres Berron, an eight-year employee of the company, according to his LinkedIn page. The company declined to make him available for comment. 

Starbucks said its approach to purchasing coffee hasn’t changed. The company pointed out that its current stocks of physical coffee are a cushion against volatility in the spot market.

Inventories of unroasted and roasted beans combined were worth about $920mn as of September, according to the annual report, the lowest fiscal year-end figure since 2021. 

“We keep a healthy and ample green coffee inventory that outpaces other roasters,” Starbucks said. 

Advertisement

Global coffee production has been rocked by poor weather. The US Department of Agriculture last week cut its production forecast for Brazil, the top supplier, citing irregular rainfall and high temperatures that could depress its next harvest. 

“The global coffee market just can’t seem to catch a break,” said Kona Haque, a commodities analyst at ED&F Man in London. “Just when you think maybe this year we’re going to get a big crop and finally get back to a surplus and rebuild our stocks, you get another adverse-weather event in either Brazil or Vietnam, and things get tight again.” 

“Because markets now are tighter than usual, there is upward pressure on prices,” she added. “In a rising price environment, clearly you want to be hedged. You do not want to be exposed to rising spot prices.” 

Continue Reading

News

With talks teetering, climate negotiators struck a controversial $300 billion deal

Published

on

With talks teetering, climate negotiators struck a controversial 0 billion deal

Activists demanding that rich countries pay up for climate finance for developing countries at the COP29 climate conference in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images/Getty Images Europe


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Sean Gallup/Getty Images/Getty Images Europe

Negotiators at a global climate conference in Baku, Azerbaijan, struck a last-minute deal for wealthy countries to help their poorer neighbors deal with global warming, saving the annual meeting as it verged on collapse.

From the outset, the focus of the United Nations’ COP29 climate conference was raising money to help developing nations cut their climate pollution and prepare for threats they face from extreme weather. Developing nations have contributed far less of the pollution heating the planet, but suffer the harms of extreme weather disproportionately.

Those countries had pushed for climate funding of $1.3 trillion a year. But the final agreement set a goal of $300 billion annually. Some representatives of developing countries were furious at the outcome, saying $300 billion a year from industrialized countries is far short of what vulnerable nations need.

Advertisement

“It’s a paltry sum,” said Chandni Raina, a member of India’s delegation, during the conference’s closing meeting. “It is not something that will enable conducive climate action that is necessary for the survival of our country and for the growth of our people, their livelihoods.”

Announced more than a day after the talks were scheduled to end, the funding deal was brokered after world leaders and climate activists leveled sharp criticism at industrialized nations, as well as the Azerbaijani officials who hosted the two-week meeting.

Raina criticized the meeting’s president, Mukhtar Babayev, for passing the financing agreement before he gave countries a chance to comment.

“Trust is the basis for all action, and this incident is indicative of a lack of trust, a lack of collaboration on an issue which is a global challenge, which is faced by all of us, and most of all by the developing countries that are not responsible for it,” Raina said. “But, we’ve seen what you have done.”

Mohamed Adow, director of the Kenyan think tank Power Shift Africa, said at a press conference on Friday that this was “the worst COP in recent memory.”

Advertisement

Taking aim at wealthy countries that built their economies over centuries using fossil fuels, Adow added, “You can’t have a negotiation if only one side is actually engaging in good faith and putting forward proposals that [respond] to the needs on the ground.”

The climate talks were held at the end of what will almost certainly be the hottest year on record. Global temperatures are rising mainly because of heat-trapping pollution that’s created when people burn fossil fuels like coal and oil. Global emissions rose to a new record in 2023, and the world is nowhere close to meeting a goal countries set to limit warming in order to reduce the risks of worsening disasters from extreme weather like floods and heat waves.

The leaders of some developing countries briefly walked out of negotiations on Saturday. Cedric Schuster, Samoa’s minister of natural resources and environment, said in a statement that developing countries were treated with “contempt.”

“What is happening here is highlighting what a different boat our vulnerable countries are in, compared to the developed countries,” said Schuster, who chairs the Alliance of Small Island States, which represents dozens of low-lying nations from the Caribbean to the South China Sea. “After this COP29 ends, we cannot just sail off into the sunset. We are literally sinking.”

President Biden said in a statement that the COP29 climate-funding agreement was “ambitious.” “It will help mobilize the level of finance – from all sources – that developing countries need to accelerate the transition to clean, sustainable economies, while opening up new markets for American-made electric vehicles, batteries, and other products,” Biden said.

Advertisement

However, the recent U.S. presidential election hung over the conference. Voters’ decision to send Donald Trump back to the White House raises questions about whether the country will continue working on global climate initiatives. Trump, who has promised to pursue policies in his second term to support the country’s oil and gas industry, is expected to again pull the U.S. out of the landmark 2015 Paris climate agreement.

Here’s what else did — and didn’t — happen at COP29.

A sign displays an unofficial temperature as jets taxi at Sky Harbor International Airport at dusk, July 12, 2023, in Phoenix.

A sign displays an unofficial temperature as jets taxi at Sky Harbor International Airport at dusk, July 12, 2023, in Phoenix.

Matt York/AP


hide caption

Advertisement

toggle caption

Matt York/AP

Deal calls for at least $300 billion annually for developing countries

Negotiators agreed that wealthy countries will provide developing nations at least $300 billion a year in climate funding by 2035.

That’s triple what poorer nations were promised under a previous commitment, but it’s a fraction of what researchers say is required. A report released during the conference shows developing nations other than China — which boasts the world’s second-largest economy and is the second-biggest contributor of climate pollution historically — will need about $1.3 trillion in climate funding annually.

Advertisement

The final COP29 agreement includes a vague goal for “all actors to work together” to provide $1.3 trillion to developing nations by 2035.

“The poorest and most vulnerable nations are rightfully disappointed that wealthier countries didn’t put more money on the table when billions of people’s lives are at stake,” Ani Dasgupta, chief executive of the World Resources Institute, said in a statement.

The debate over climate funding traces back more than a decade. In 2009, industrialized countries set a goal to give developing nations $100 billion a year by 2020 to help them deal with climate change. In 2015, countries extended the pledge to 2025. They also said they’d set a new goal that reflects the “needs and priorities of developing countries” before the old one expires. That’s what negotiators fought over in Azerbaijan.

Heading into this year’s meeting, it was clear developing countries are in a bind. They need help, but whatever money wealthy nations pledged was certain to be just a portion of what’s required to cope with climate change. And industrialized countries were slow to deliver on their original commitment, so poorer nations are relying on unreliable neighbors.

The dollar figure wasn’t the only point of contention. Leaders of vulnerable states say they need a lot more assistance to come in the form of grants — not loans — in order to avoid increasing the debt burden on poorer countries.

Advertisement

The final agreement doesn’t guarantee poorer countries the grant funding they say they need. The document says the $300 billion annually from wealthy countries can come from “a wide variety of sources,” including private investors.

Developing countries have also pushed for compensation for the damages from climate-related disasters, like more intense storms and droughts. Last year, richer countries agreed to create a “loss and damage” fund to fill that need, housed at the World Bank. So far, more than $720 million has been pledged and at COP29, countries officially opened the fund for donations.

A small number of countries have received payments already, part of pilot projects organized by Scotland.

A call to phase out fossil fuels faces pushback

At last year’s meeting in Dubai, negotiators for the first time agreed countries should transition away from fossil fuels. This time, calls to reiterate that agreement faced pushback.

The world’s largest oil exporter, Saudi Arabia, was identified as a primary force behind that effort.

Advertisement

“Their blatant obstruction has ensured there’s no clear commitment to phase out fossil fuels — an outrageous betrayal of humanity and the urgent fight against climate catastrophe,” Maria Ron Balsera, executive director of the Center for Economic and Social Rights said in a statement.

The host country for COP29 also came in for criticism.

Oil and gas dominate Azerbaijan’s economy, representing 90% of the country’s exports and finance about 60% of the government’s budget. An official with the COP29 host country, Azerbaijan, was recorded by the human rights group Global Witness arranging a meeting to discuss potential fossil fuel deals.

At COP29, Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, said natural resources like oil and gas are a “gift of the god.”

“And countries should not be blamed for having them, and should not be blamed for bringing these resources to the market,” Aliyev said. “Because the market needs them. The people need them.”

Advertisement
A portion of Amazon rainforest deforested by illegal fire in Brazil this August.

A portion of Amazon rainforest deforested by illegal fire in Brazil this August. 

Evaristo Sa/AFP via Getty


hide caption

toggle caption

Evaristo Sa/AFP via Getty

Advertisement

Some countries unveiled new climate targets

As part of the Paris climate treaty, countries have to announce plans to make deeper cuts to their own climate pollution by 2035. The hope is that all the pollution cuts combined will limit the world’s warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, compared to temperatures from the 1800s.

Targets are due in February, and with a looming deadline, some countries announced their targets in Baku.

United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer made a speech early in the summit, announcing the country would slash emissions 81% by 2035, compared with 1990 levels. “It’s very important to establish ambition, and that’s exactly what the UK [target] did,” says Ani Dasgupta, president of the World Resources Institute.

Brazil, whose climate emissions come mostly from rampant deforestation in the Amazon, also announced its target. It plans to cut climate pollution by as much as two-thirds by 2035 compared to 2005 levels. While Brazil says its cuts align with the 1.5 degree goal, climate policy experts say that’s still unclear.

Advertisement

Deal over carbon markets draws criticism

One of the goals at this year’s summit was to finally agree on rules for a global system for trading carbon offsets, or carbon credits.

Carbon credits are basically a promise. A promise that when a country or business purchases a credit, that money is going toward an action that reduces or removes planet-heating pollution.

At the summit, negotiators concluded negotiations over parts of “Article 6”, a part of the Paris Agreement that allows countries to cooperate to reach their climate targets, including by trading carbon credits.

A leading company in the carbon credit sector, Verra, called it “a historic step.”

But many carbon market researchers voiced concerns. Research has repeatedly shown that many carbon credits don’t reduce emissions. In fact, a new research paper looking at thousands of carbon credit projects found less than 16% of the carbon credits are actually reducing climate pollution.

Advertisement

The new rules “could end up undermining our efforts to rein in emissions rather than advancing them,” said the nonprofit Carbon Market Watch in a statement.

Funding for health initiatives falls short

At last year’s COP28 in Dubai, advocacy organizations made the case that future climate negotiations should include a new priority: protecting human health. Climate change, they said, is now one of the biggest threats to health worldwide. It is amplifying health risks from extreme weather, such as dangerous heat waves like those in Europe or India that killed tens of thousands of people in recent years. It also spurs the spread of infectious disease, worsens air quality, and stresses people’s mental well-being.

“Climate change itself is an overarching issue that influences health,” said Florence Ngala, chief environmental officer at the Ministry of Health in Zambia, at the meeting this year.

In her country this year, a climate-worsened flood lasted for two months and led to thousands of cases of cholera and 800 deaths. But the impacts didn’t end when the flood receded: the disruption to health services lasted for months, and some health facilities postponed upgrades that might have helped them become more resilient.

Advocates hoped at COP29, developed countries would commit to increasing the amount of money flowing to threatened countries like Zambia. Those would be critical to shoring up health services that protect people from climate-worsened risks and to developing climate-resilient health facilities. But the final commitments fall short of what many developing countries were demanding—and what organizations like the World Bank have suggested is needed.

Advertisement

“It is deeply discouraging to yet again see governments of wealthy countries that claim to be leaders kick the can on climate down the road, at the cost of the lives and health of their populations, and of everyone around the world” says Jeni Miller, executive director of the Global Climate and Health Alliance.

Continue Reading

News

Kick-start for carbon credit market after loose rules agreed at COP29

Published

on

Kick-start for carbon credit market after loose rules agreed at COP29

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Countries at the United Nations climate summit in Baku struck a final deal on the broad rules to launch carbon trading markets, almost a decade after being first proposed.

The agreement passed at the UN COP29 climate summit late on Saturday night will allow countries and companies to trade credits for cuts in carbon emissions to offset their carbon footprints.

The carbon trading mechanism had first been formally sketched out in the 2015 Paris agreement on limiting climate change, as a way for polluters to pay for other countries to cut emissions on their behalf. 

Advertisement

But it has proved controversial over fears it will not result in the promised removal of carbon from the atmosphere.

The head of delegation for a group of heavily forested countries, including Bolivia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kevin Conrad, said “properly regulated, markets can become a force for good, and start to reverse the market failures causing environmental and atmospheric destruction”.

The birth of the market prompted cheers and standing ovations by UN negotiators in the first session of the final plenary, in a rare breakthrough at the summit that was otherwise on the verge of collapse.

States and companies will be able to trade credits meant to represent one tonne of carbon dioxide saved or removed from the atmosphere, under mechanisms subject to loose oversight by the UN and designed to avoid double-counting of emissions cuts.

The final agreement overcame a quarrel about a proposed UN registry for tracking the flow in emission claims, with the US forced to compromise on how much power this registry should have.

Advertisement

Host country Azerbaijan made the issue of carbon emissions trading a priority, pushing successfully on the first day of the two-week summit for countries to adopt an initial element of the global market.

In subsequent negotiations to settle the rules, it drove the participants to overcome their disagreements. This included on a series of trade-offs between requiring more rigorous accounting and easing the pathway to get the market off the ground, with a rule book on principles for how credits should be traded, counted and checked.

Countries and companies took advantage of the prospective launch of the market by signing preliminary deals in recent weeks. Commodity trader Trafigura announced a “pilot” carbon project to help Mozambique develop carbon restoration projects.

Some experts warned however that the new market could face many of the same greenwashing allegations that have plagued the existing unregulated trade in credits between companies.

These have caused the voluntary credit markets to shrink from $1.4bn in 2022 to $1.1bn last year, based on MSCI Carbon Markets estimates.

Advertisement

“The deal leaves a lot of trust in the hands of [countries] which is a problem because the rules themselves are not yet net zero [emissions] aligned,” said Injy Johnstone, a research fellow at the University of Oxford.

The concerns were echoed by Isa Mulder of Carbon Market Watch, who said the “dangerously loose and opaque” deal enshrined a “free-for-all” approach.

Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

UN carbon market experts will continue to discuss which types of credits countries can buy. For example, some countries would like to sell credits linked to hypothetical CO₂ that is not emitted, for example from protecting a forest, closing a coal mine or cooking on a stove using gas rather than wood as fuel, to cancel out real greenhouse gas emissions.

These types of credits could ultimately lead to more CO₂ entering the atmosphere, some experts say, in part because it could lessen the incentive for polluters to make plans to cut their underlying emissions.

Advertisement

One negotiator described discussions as “very, very tough” before ultimately settling on a “buyer beware” approach which will rely mainly on transparency to shame countries which fall into bad practice.

The money raised by carbon deals could help contribute to the climate finance needs of poorer countries, which economists estimated at $1.3tn a year.

But others expressed caution about the solutions provided by carbon emissions trading. Brazil’s environment minister Marina Silva said it was not a “panacea” for boosting finance to developing countries.

Climate Capital

Where climate change meets business, markets and politics. Explore the FT’s coverage here.

Are you curious about the FT’s environmental sustainability commitments? Find out more about our science-based targets here

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending