HomeNewsEnvironmentHow COP26 broke trust and downed global south

How COP26 broke trust and downed global south

India had suggested that it will address all fossil fuels in an equitable manner, but that would place most of the burden squarely on the US and rich countries.

November 15, 2021 / 13:12 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Shilo Shiv Suleman of India, an artist with the Fearless Collective, painted a mural depicting indigenous leaders of unrecognised lands as protests continued during COP26 in Glasgow.
Shilo Shiv Suleman of India, an artist with the Fearless Collective, painted a mural depicting indigenous leaders of unrecognised lands as protests continued during COP26 in Glasgow.

Two weeks ago, a host of delegates from the global south arrived at Glasgow, UK, with the hope to seal a lasting solution to the climate crisis. But, once again, they returned disappointed, angry and helpless.

The 26th Conference of Parties of UNFCCC, commonly referred to as COP26, turned out to be an “epic fail” and a “greenwash drama” hijacked by “fossil fuel interests” and controlled by “pale, male and stale” people, and did nothing to reflect “the emergency, the urgency and the impacts of global temperatures going beyond 1.5-degree Celsius.”

Story continues below Advertisement

Much of the anger was directed towards the COP presidency of the UK that overplayed the expectations from this summit, already delayed by a year because of the COVID pandemic. All those phrases of “last hope for climate” and “the most inclusive COP” and the assurance of “finishing well within time on Friday, 12 November, 2021” seemed to be mere statements made for writing press releases and making public posturing.

As it turned out, COP26 was the most “unequal COP” where civil society observers were kept out of negotiation halls even as many from the global south were unable to attend due to “vaccine inequity”. Until Saturday afternoon, 24 hours past COP26 president Alok Sharma’s self-proclaimed deadline, the negotiators were still haggling over whether to “phase out fossil fuels” or “phase down coal” and once again hope was mummified for the next COP to be held in Egypt.