Can the annual conference of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP-18)
 – under way in Doha – be a forum for meaningful action? A global 
roundup of experts tackles some of the thorniest questions. Simon Dalby 
of Canada's Balsillie School of International Affairs says steep 
challenges remain in reaching a global treaty, but better results could 
come from joint ventures among non-state actors. Susanne Droege of the 
German Institute for International and Security Affairs says Doha could 
be a venue for more bilateral and sector-related cooperation.
Artur Gradziuk of the Polish Institute of International 
Affairs says negotiators should focus on creating a "smart work program"
 that lays the groundwork for future talks. At New Delhi's Centre for 
Policy Research, Navroz K. Dubash also zeroes in on procedural issues 
and the importance of what he calls "incremental trust building." Yu 
Hongyuan of the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies stresses 
the importance of reaching consensus on the second phase of the Kyoto 
treaty that mandates emissions cuts by wealthy countries.
Simon Dalby, CIGI Chair in the Political Economy of Climate Change, Balsillie School of International Affairs
As
 the delegates gather in Doha for this year's climate change talks, 
circumstances have changed in many ways in the twenty years since the 
UNFCCC was initiated. Negotiators need to bear in mind both that climate
 change is now a reality, and that mechanisms to slow the process have 
had very limited success.
Arctic Ocean sea ice has receded far faster than most 
scientific projections had assumed. Summer heat waves in Asia in 2010 
and North America this year, numerous typhoons in recent years in the 
Asia Pacific, and now superstorm Sandy in the United States have made it
 clear that climate change is a matter of the present, not a matter of 
the future.
Unless things change very soon, the commonly agreed 
target of limiting global warming to 2 degrees Celsius will not be met. 
The difficult but important truth is that twenty years of discussions, 
the Kyoto Protocol, and plans for a successor agreement have not stopped the growth of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
The focus on short-term economic costs and benefits in 
the negotiations between states has been to the detriment of any 
long-term collective action. These competitive stances–trying to avoid 
short-term relative costs in the economic calculations of emissions 
limits, offsets, and development mechanisms in a binding treaty–preclude
 either longer-term thinking or more cooperative ventures.
It is now crucial to stimulate cooperative ventures that work to reduce emissions rather than merely offsetting them.
Assuming that states can sort out all the details in a 
single treaty hasn't worked so far, although it remains the ideal 
arrangement. It is also clear that there is no magic formula that will 
break the many logjams in the negotiations.
Climate change touches so many facets of human activity 
that it may simply be too complex to be encapsulated in a single treaty 
arrangement between states. Governing climate change may better lie in 
the possibility for lots of cooperative initiatives by corporations, 
municipalities, and other actors.
Constraining the emissions of greenhouse gases is 
essential, but much new thinking is needed about how to build new forms 
of economy not dependent on fossil fuels. While a binding treaty remains
 an important goal, it is now crucial to stimulate cooperative ventures 
that work to reduce emissions rather than merely offsetting them. The 
issue is now simply too urgent to wait for a perfect treaty.
Navroz K. Dubash, Senior Fellow, Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi
A former Indian negotiator likes to say that the first rule of climate negotiations is that they can never fail. As the Doha COP gets underway, this perspective helps interpret the outcomes of the Durban meeting
 a year ago and set the stage for Doha. Agreeing to start a new round of
 talks by liberal deployment of creative ambiguity allowed everyone to 
declare success in Durban. But the discussions since suggest that old 
divisions never really went away. It falls to negotiators in Doha to 
re-address old debates in only minimally new guises.
The hardiest nut of the UNFCCC process is the issue of 
"common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities"
 (CBDRRC) and the associated division of countries into developed and 
developing. Some developed countries thought they had cracked this nut 
by excluding explicit reference to this principle in the Durban Platform.
 But, as many developing countries were quick to note, the platform 
states that future negotiations will take place under the convention, 
notably including the principle of equity and CBDRRC. To punctuate the 
point, a new grouping of "like-minded developing countries" has emerged 
over the last year, with protection of CBDRRC prominent in their 
position statements. Whether old positions are rehearsed or whether 
signs of a middle ground emerge at Doha is worth watching for.
At the end of the day, Doha is about keeping the game going.
At the core of the Durban deal was the promised rebirth of the Kyoto Protocol in a second commitment period. But developed countries
 have been dropping like flies–Canada, Japan, Russia, New Zealand, and, 
of course, the United States–at last count. Nonetheless, the Kyoto 
Protocol is the only legally robust deal in town, and rapid resolution 
of the remaining technical issues followed by quick ratification 
post-Doha is a necessary condition for further trust building. This is a
 minimal condition for success at Doha.
Perhaps most tricky are a set of procedural issues, the future of the Working Group on Long-Term Cooperative Action
 and its linkage to the Durban Platform process. Many industrialized 
countries seek a clean break (read: no more differentiation) and 
transfer to the Durban Platform process. Developing countries fear that 
the hard-won gains over the years to expand the agenda beyond mitigation
 to ensure attention to adaptation, finance, and technology
 will be lost. Indeed, prematurely terminating these discussions would 
make a mockery of the process. The procedural issue conceals a larger 
battle over whether differentiation continues to frame debate over these
 agenda items.
On the surface, Doha is a meeting about nuts and bolts. 
But long-standing political contention continues to shape the key 
decisions. These deep-rooted differences are unlikely to be resolved, 
but in the details are the scope to win tactical leverage on big 
strategic positions and opportunities for incremental trust building. At
 the end of the day, however, Doha is about keeping the game going; the 
first rule of climate negotiations is unlikely to be breached.
Susanne Droege, Head of Global Issues Division, German Institute for International and Security Affairs, SWP Berlin
The
 COP in Durban 2011 re-launched international climate negotiations. A 
broader deal shall be set in force in 2020. This would end the times of 
dichotomy between developed and developing countries' mitigation 
obligations established under the Kyoto Protocol. The "Durban Platform" 
is essentially the way forward proposed by many opponents of the Kyoto 
Protocol, including the United States. Still, this process lacks the 
support it needs to live up to the challenge. So how realistic is it 
that a new treaty draft will emerge until the 2015 deadline? Before 
these talks can get off the ground in Doha, the second commitment period
 of the Kyoto Protocol needs to be decided upon. Once a decision on Kyoto is out of the way, the newly established Durban Platform Working Group
 (ADP) will have enough leeway to sort out a new regime and—for the 
interim phase until 2020—an increase in mitigation ambition based on 
voluntary activities and pledges.
Before these talks can get off the ground in Doha, the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol needs to be decided upon.
So far, the UNFCCC talks are too process-related. If the
 ADP wants to keep the deadlines, it better gets itself organized. One 
year has passed with talks about ending and integrating the old process 
(known as the "long-term cooperative action" working group) into the new
 one. Considering the very tight time budget, the urgency of the matter 
at hand, and the very reluctant attitude towards a stringent process so 
far, a clear structure, timetable, and mandate should be decided upon in
 Doha. This will not happen without the support of major interest groups
 and single players. The developing and the emerging countries take 
different stances on this. While the least developed countries and small
 island states, together with the EU, want to keep up the political 
pressure, countries like Brazil or China prefer to keep it low.
With or without progress at the Doha talks, parallel 
action on the ground is needed. The Europeans—who failed on the promise 
to unilaterally raise their climate target to 30 percent emissions 
reductions by 2020—are looking for allies beyond the group of poor 
countries known as the Durban Alliance. Amongst the potential partners 
are not only the usual suspects, such as China. Fast developing 
middle-income countries, such as Indonesia or Mexico, also qualify for 
short-term low-carbon initiatives. Doha could be a good time to test the
 readiness for more bilateral and sector-related cooperation.
Yu Hongyuan, Professor and Deputy Director of the Department of International Organizations and Laws, Shanghai Institutes for International Studies
The
 Eighteenth Session of the UNFCCC Conference of the Parties is aimed at 
bringing new insights to global climate change discussion through 
innovative methods. It sets out to produce balanced, reasonable, 
feasible solutions to support the Durban outcome, and will conclude the 
negotiation on AWG-LCA (Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action 
under the Convention) and AWG-KP (Working Group on Further Commitments 
for Annex I Parties under the Kyoto Protocol). Among all these critical 
objectives, the most important one is to achieve the linkage between ADP
 (Durban Platform for Enhanced Action) and the outcomes of both working 
groups.
ADP and KP2 (the second commitment period for developed 
states under the Kyoto Protocol) should be correlated. As the 
precondition for a legally binding global climate treaty, the most 
"doable" thing in Doha is to achieve the political consensus on KP2 
among all the parties. By so doing, the international community will 
make the ADP and KP2 move toward a balanced outcome. The Doha conference
 should also make the LCA and its key elements embedded, refined, and 
transferred to the ADP.
The principle of equity will be one of the core pillars 
of Doha Outcome, and the revision of equity principle should be a high 
priority. For the past twenty years, the principle of "common but 
differentiated responsibility" protected and will continue to protect 
the development rights for the developing countries, and will have 
developed countries take a main role on climate mitigation and 
adaptation. According to this principle, the developed countries are the
 main actors for addressing the problem of greenhouse 
gas emissions. However, this does not mean that developing countries do 
not have the responsibility for climate change while achieving their own
 development. China, along with other BASIC group countries (India, 
South Africa, and Brazil), is now working with the international 
community to fulfill the principle of "Equitable Access to Sustainable 
Development."
The Doha Conference should be seen as an opportunity for enhancing 
economic sectors during crises by linking climate-resilient economy and 
low-carbon development.
Climate change, in its core, is a kind of economic 
challenge. The Doha Conference should be seen as an opportunity for 
enhancing economic sectors during crises by linking climate-resilient 
economy and low-carbon development. The Green Climate Fund
 and its permanent secretariat should be strengthened to provide more 
finance and technology assistances to developing countries.
All the parties should understand that it is in their 
national interests to stop waiting and move ahead in putting more 
concrete and balanced proposals on the table in Doha. As the 2012 UN Rio+20 Outcome Document
 mentioned, multi-level governance has played an increasingly important 
role in sustainable development. In Doha, all parties should explore 
multi-stakeholders and multi-priority areas in climate mitigation and 
adaptation.
Doha is just a place to formulate political consensus 
over climate and development among governments, businesses and civil 
society, enhance mutual understanding, and promote understanding of 
climate change's challenges. All the parties to Doha should deal with 
all kinds of climate challenges, whether they are traditional or urban, 
regional or global, but the list should be set on the basis of different
 countries' priorities.
Artur Gradziuk, International Economic Relations and Global Issues Programme Coordinator, Polish Institute of International Affairs
It's too early to expect any significant progress at Doha. This is
 the first year of negotiation on a new climate treaty within a new 
Ad-hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform of Enhanced Action (ADP). It
 would replace two-track negotiation on future mitigation actions 
(AWG-LCA and AWG-KP), which didn't meet expectations. Prospects for the 
new track at this point of negotiation are uneven. It must be remembered
 that in Durban last year, countries promised to promise something (in 
terms of mitigation action objectives) in the following years in the 
form of some kind of document, which is now hard to be defined.
The critical thing to move constructively into a globally binding 
agreement is the political will of major parties, which is not seen on 
the horizon.
The critical thing needed to move constructively into a 
globally binding agreement is the political will of major parties, which
 is not seen on the horizon. Two major emitters are currently not
 in a position to present such political will: the United States after 
its presidential election and China in a leadership transition period. 
It is hard to expect that negotiators from those countries would receive
 a more flexible mandate for Doha. In this context, the EU itself is in a
 difficult position. It leads by example, at home adopting and 
implementing legislation that is more ambitious than in other parts of 
the world, but at the UNFCCC level, it has not pursued climate diplomacy
 taking on the top global emitters.
To move the process forward, negotiators in Doha should 
focus on adopting a smart work program of the ADP for 2013 that would 
prepare the ground for tough negotiations in 2014 and 2015. That program
 needs to assume discussion on domestic policy and legislative actions 
to be taken by major emitters, which are preconditions to conclude a 
globally binding agreement by 2015. If such homework would start, it's 
also advisable to consider holding a special summit on climate change on
 the level of heads of state before COP-20 in 2014.
A summit would facilitate stocktaking exercises by 
decision-makers, identifying gaps to be narrowed, and could answer the 
question of whether concluding a new global climate treaty acceptable 
for major parties is a feasible task. If, in the end, there will be no 
globally binding agreement in 2015, we can expect climate actions on 
individual countries' basis, which should not be underestimated, but 
collectively could not contribute to meet the stated goal of keeping 
global temperature increase below 2 degrees Celsius.
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