Achieving Sustainability

COP 28 preview: taking the temperature

Delegates from most nations of the world head to the desert at the end of November, as the latest meeting of the United Nations Climate Change Conference – better known as COP 28 – takes place in Dubai. A busy agenda includes a focus on the impact of heatwaves on health and how trade can play a role in mitigating climate change.

Key takeaways

  • The location and leadership of COP 28 will be major headlines for this year’s conference.
  • The financing of fossil fuels and the ability to rewire global trade will come under intense scrutiny.
  • Amid extreme weather events, the climate impact on the vast (and rising) global cost of health is a much-needed addition to the agenda.
  • Biodiversity, food and just transition are critical discussions but may be overshadowed by the above topics.

COP 28 begins on 30 November and controversy remains around its location in Dubai as well as the presidency under Sultan Al Jaber, CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company. Among potential highlights of the event, we hope to see transition strategies made more explicit. But the co-opting of the agenda by fossil fuel interests will generate further scepticism that the COP forum has become too closely aligned with the traditional economic interests of sovereigns and corporates.

calendarOne year on from COP 27

Last November, we summarised the COP 27 meeting as showing “progress amid the setbacks.”1 Looking past the more negative headlines, progress was made at the meeting and there were reasons to be optimistic.

It felt like COP 27 set the mixed tone for the year. On the one hand, 2023 is likely to be confirmed as the hottest year on record, the incidence and impact of severe weather events have worsened, and the climate topic remains highly politicised. More positively, we are seeing significant technological advances in energy efficiency and climate solutions, the capital being allocated to sustainability is increasing, and comprehensive and targeted climate policies (like the US Inflation Reduction Act) are shifting perceived wisdom.

calendarCash burn of fossil fuels

Amid all the column inches on the additional consumer cost of moving from fossil fuels to renewable energies, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that governments subsidised the cost of fossil fuels to the tune of USD 7 trillion in 2022 – a figure representing 7.1% of global GDP.2 Fossil fuels contribute over 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and the global economy is, in effect, paying twice – once to finance the cause of the emissions and again to finance the damage from the emissions. We do not expect any major developments on the phasing out or down of fossil fuels, but pressure to redirect subsidies could be significantly impactful for new carbon removal or storage technologies. Progress on methane emissions and renewable energies is also very likely.

calendarHealth in the heat

COP 28 will be the first conference meeting to explicitly discuss the link between climate change and global health trends. This first-ever health ministerial meeting will be held in partnership with the World Health Organisation. OECD countries spend on average around 10% of their GDP on healthcare.3 Climate change is increasing the scale and breadth of health conditions, but the impact is especially acute for lower-income populations.

calendarTrade and climate change

The topic of who and how climate is financed is an evergreen topic at these events, but we expect trade to represent a new dimension to discussions on transforming the climate finance system. Trade was voluntarily set aside from the Paris Agreement, but we expect it to be a major focus on the Finance thematic day. Climate policies risk being ineffective amid legal challenges and trade tensions caused by the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism – a tariff on carbon-intensive products imported by the European Union.4 Divergent climate policies and resistance from the World Trade Organisation are also factors. This topic may create more noise than progress, but it is important if global economies are to align on net zero through a new global framework for financing climate transition.

calendarInnovating the approach to natural capital

The last 12 months have been pivotal for biodiversity with COP 15’s Global Biodiversity Framework, the arrival of the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures’ final recommendations and broad-based recognition of nature’s contribution to economic resilience – and the emerging risks to that. With evident urgency in mind, COP 28 could take discussions at the International Advisory Panel for Biodiversity Credits to a global stage. The panel is likely to build on gaps, lessons learned and existing best practice in the carbon credit market to promote the expansion of the biodiversity credit market.

calendarFood for thought

Biodiversity leads to the next focus topic – food security. On 10 December, the day is dedicated to food, agriculture and water issues, with discussions focusing on investment, financing mechanisms, water-resilient food systems and regenerative agriculture. The World Bank has highlighted rising food insecurity5 amid ongoing geopolitical events, varying impacts of the return of El Niño and restrictions like India’s recent ban on the exportation of non-basmati rice. We expect a draft text on the delivery of a food system transformation targeting a just transition to sustainable food security.

calendarJust transitions – just in time

The United Nations recently reiterated the targeting for financial and technical support to enable just transitions, where the shift to a more sustainable economy is fair to all.6 Just transition has been discussed in prior COPs, but the rising incidence and severity of climate impacts is hitting the most vulnerable communities the hardest. The Energy, Industry and Just Transition Day will look at opportunities to rapidly decarbonise energy and industrial value chains, while accelerating economic growth and protecting social welfare. We wait to see how many more countries join the Just Energy Transition Partnerships7, while further clarity is expected around the structure and governance of the Loss and Damage Fund announced last year.

In summary, there’s much to look forward to.

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    • All Sub-Funds may invest in financial derivative instruments (“FDI”) which may expose to higher leverage, counterparty, liquidity, valuation, volatility, market and over the counter transaction risks.  The use of derivatives may result in losses to the Sub-Funds which are greater than the amount originally invested. A Sub-Fund’s net derivative exposure may be up to 50% of its NAV.

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