Climate change |
International development agency, Oxfam, has faulted
some of the decisions taken at the recently concluded COP21 climate
change talk in Paris, France.
In a statement signed by the Media and Communications Officer,
Oxfam Nigeria, Mr. Kunle Olawoyin, the agency stated that the agreement
was not that favorable to developing countries.
It also noted that women farmers in Africa were at the front line
of dealing with the impact of climate change, but were not getting the
support they needed from international climate finance, and called on
the Federal Government to start the implementation of the country’s
Intended Nationally Determined Contribution to the United Nations
Framework on Climate Change.
Oxfam’s Head of Programmes, Constant Tchona, was quoted as saying
that the immediate implementation of the INDC would go a long way in
providing adaptation measures for the vulnerable, especially female
smallholder farmers, while ensuring investment in social safety nets and
food reserves to reduce inequality and extreme poverty in the country.
The statement read in part: “The report of the post COP 21 released
indicates that despite the joint push from the civil society,
vulnerable countries and more progressive parts of the private sector
and powerful governments failed to put our common interest above that of
narrowly defined and short-term interests. While the destination has
become clear, the lack of a pathway to stay below 1.5 degrees remains
uncertain and dangerous as a result.
“Developed countries agreed to extend the $100bn goal through to
2025, after which a new goal will be set for post-2025 finance
mobilisation, with $100bn as a floor. It remains unclear if this will be
a vague goal that no one can be held accountable to or if it
strengthens provisions specifically related to financial support from
public sources.”
According to Oxfam, the agreement does not strengthen commitment by
developed countries but repeats their obligation to provide financial
resources in continuation of existing UNFCCC obligations, adding that it
encouraged others to contribute on a voluntary basis.
“Mobilisation of climate finance should represent a ‘progression’
beyond previous efforts, but no baseline is given to measure progress
made,” it stated.
On adaptation, the agency stated that while donor announcements for
climate finance were made this year, the base from which it started was
so low that the new commitments remained a drop in the ocean.
“In Paris, adaptation was still treated as an issue for the poorest
or most vulnerable. Rich countries saw it as a bargaining chip to
secure the buy-in of poorer countries, not an essential part of a robust
global response to climate change,” it added.
Oxfam stated that according to its estimates, only $5bn to $8bn in
grants will flow towards adaptation every year; adding that the total
adaptation finance only amounts to $3 a year for each poor farmer in the
developing world.”
His words: “This disappointing outcome clearly demonstrates that
most governments (unlike a growing number of cities) have yet to grasp
the enormity of the risks they face from a failure to adequately prepare
and adapt,” the statement added.
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