HomeNewsOpinionAl Jaber's Dilemma for COP 28: Deliver finance and phase-out fossil fuels

Al Jaber's Dilemma for COP 28: Deliver finance and phase-out fossil fuels

Al Jaber has a huge challenge ahead given the failure of parties to agree on the Mitigation Work Program, vital to achieving Paris Agreement goals, at Bonn. The only way to save COP28 is for him to find ways of delivering on climate finance, the lack of which is the biggest hurdle to global efforts on climate action

June 19, 2023 / 14:27 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
COP 28 Al-Jaber
The COP28 team has pushed back against this criticism and emphasised the importance of involving fossil-fuel companies in the energy transition. (Representative image)

“The phase-down of fossil fuels is inevitable”, was the last thing anyone expected Sultan Al Jaber, managing director and group CEO of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), to admit in the presence of a small gathering of youth constituencies at the recently concluded 58th session of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, aka SB58, in Bonn, Germany.

Al Jaber is the minister of industry and advanced technology of the United Arab Emirates, and the President-designate of the United Nations climate change summit COP 28 scheduled to be held in Dubai in December 2023. This is his strongest statement yet on the future of coal, oil, and gas, in a warming world and is being interpreted by many as a climb down from his and his government’s previous positions, even if he did not suggest any time frame.

Story continues below Advertisement

Maximum energy with minimum emissions” has been Al Jaber’s mantra. “The world needs all the solutions it can get,” he said last October. “It is not oil and gas, or solar, not wind, or nuclear, or hydrogen. It is oil and gas and solar, and wind and nuclear, and hydrogen,” he said in his opening address at the 38th edition of the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition Conference (ADIPEC). In November, ADNOC endorsed plans to expand the company’s five million barrels per day oil production capacity by 2027 from a previous target of 2030, to meet rising global energy demand. As recently as January of this year, at the Atlantic Council’s Global Energy Forum, he was still reciting his mantra, ‘Our world is on its way to being home to 9.7 billion people by 2050 and will have to produce 30 per cent more energy than what is available today. As long as the world still uses hydrocarbons, we must ensure they are the least carbon-intensive possible.

Over the past year, the world’s biggest oil producers — places like the United States, Saudi Arabia, Norway and the Emirates — have approved dozens of vast new drilling projects. This month, the Emirates received long-sought permission from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the coalition of oil-producing nations that coordinates output and prices, to pump more oil starting next year. ADNOC, the oil company Al Jaber heads, is investing billions in meeting those new targets.