Business

BRICS’ climate leadership aims hang on healing deep divides

Ambitions by the BRICS group to take on a greater climate leadership role, building on success last month at United Nations nature talks, depend on the countries overcoming fractious politics and entrenched disagreements over money.

As the United States has withdrawn from global efforts to combat climate change and, more generally, shifted its focus to promoting domestic interests, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – known collectively as the BRICS – are well-placed to influence the outcomes of high-profile meetings this year.

They established their credentials by proposing a draft text that ensured agreement at the COP16 talks in February in Rome, a dozen sources told Reuters, potentially unlocking billions of dollars to help halt the destruction of ecosystems.

“Now BRICS has been able to come together in this fashion, (it) will influence our discussions in other platforms going forward,” Narend Singh, deputy minister of forestry, fisheries and the environment, for South Africa said.

South Africa is boosting its profile as holder of the G20 presidency this year, while another BRICS member Brazil prepares to host COP30 climate talks in November.

“BRICS can fill a space that needs to be filled at this moment in the multilateral negotiations,” Brazil’s chief negotiator at COP16, Maria Angelica Ikeda, said.

Colombia’s Susana Muhamad, president of the COP16 nature talks, said the BRICS countries were positioning to be “bridge builders”.

“They are trying to create this balance to represent the Global South in front of the far-right governments that are emerging in the U.S., Italy and Argentina,” she said.

“I understand there’s a lot of countries wanting to join BRICS, because it’s a way, if you have to confront something like the U.S., you are not alone.”

A British official present at the talks, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said other countries needed to consider what the BRICS’ more muscular approach meant for global institutions.

DISPARATE GROUP

But if BRICS’ is to help fill the vacuum left by the United States under President Donald Trump, it has to address internal divisions over politics and finance.

The group’s refusal to assume the official financial obligations of donor countries could prove a stumbling block, Timo Leiter, a distinguished policy fellow at the London School of Economics, said.

So far the middle-income BRICS have resisted demands from cash-strapped developed countries that they should share financial liability, complicating the quest for compromise at U.N. negotiations on climate funding and upcoming talks on development finance in Seville, Spain.

Of the $25.8 billion in biodiversity-related financing in 2022, nearly three-quarters came from five sources: European Union institutions, France, Germany, Japan and the United States, data from the OECD showed.

Official development finance for biodiversity from donor countries 2015-2022 in millions of USD

Diverging national interests among the BRICS, with Russia keen to maintain its sales of fossil fuels, while Brazil presses countries to decarbonise faster at COP30, may also prove sticking points.

“They (the BRICS) are drastically different in terms of development stage and emissions trajectory,” said Li Shuo, director of China Climate at Asia Society.

“What ties them together is the geopolitical aspiration which leads to the question of can they agree to put forward an affirmative agenda.”

A test of the group’s solidarity could be at a meeting in Bonn in June where countries begin to set out their COP30 negotiating positions, analysts said.

The Financing for Development conference in Seville in June could also prove pivotal, with ministers set to discuss global sustainability goals and ongoing reform of the international financial system.

“This will be the perfect entry point for BRICS to advance their aim of changing the global order and having a stronger say in the global financial system,” Leiter said. “The new U.S. position is almost a gift.”

Shorter-term, the BRICS are likely to renew demands for more say in the running of the Global Environment Facility (GEF), which disburses much of the world’s biodiversity finance.

GEF reform is a focus as richer countries cut development spending while demanding nature-rich countries do more to protect ecosystems such as the Amazon.

“It’s a problem that instead of having more money directed to nature and to biodiversity, we have countries updating their nuclear weapons, or buying more armaments,” said Brazil’s Ikeda.

“At the same time, they’re demanding from us, the mega-diverse countries more and more obligations.”

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

What to do about energy sector reforms when governance incentives are the problem?

In countries where electricity outages and “load shedding” are a regular feature of life and…

1 hour ago

Sector-targeted Skills Development as Industrial Policy

Today’s blog is a background note I prepared for a forthcoming Policy Research Report on…

2 hours ago

How AI and machine learning can predict and explain social risks for more effective development operations

At the time when the Government of South Africa approached the World Bank’s Disaster Risk Financing…

2 hours ago

Middle East institutional investors to increase allocations in private markets

US asset manager Nuveen indicates investors are looking for diversification outside of developed markets. Middle…

2 hours ago

Mapping the contours of Chinese policy transmission at home and abroad

China’s place within international trade networks and global supply chains makes the propagation of Chinese…

2 hours ago

From AI investment to GDP growth: An ecosystem view

Forecasts on the economic impacts of artificial intelligence diverge sharply. This column assesses how the…

2 hours ago