Glasgow: The Union environment and the climate minister, Bhupender Yadav on Saturday did not agree with the language on the fossil fuel subsidy in the Draft COP26 deal at the UN climate summit and said it did not have a balance.
In one of the strongest criticism of the design draft, Yadav said developing countries had the right to use the remainder of the global “carbon budget”, or the amount of carbon dioxide in the world could release before heating across 1.5 degrees Celsius threshold.
“Mr President Thank you for your efforts to build a consensus,” he told the British COP26 president, Alok Sharma, with what was called a Stockesaking Plenary.
“However, I’m worried, consensus is still difficult to understand.” In such situations, how could anyone expect that developing countries can make a promise about tracing the subsidy of coal and fossil fuels when developing districts still have the development agenda and eradication of their poverty? “Yadav said that climate change” was caused by an unsustainable lifestyle and wasteful consumption pattern “.
The problem of subsidies for oil, gas and coal has become the main sticky point at the top, where negotiators have missed the Friday deadline to attack the agreement to maintain A mutual goal to limit global warming to 1.5c.
Previously, a new draft of the agreement negotiated over the last two weeks was referred to in countries to accelerate “efforts to phase-out of inefficient fossil fuel subsidies.
“Etter adjusts their country to handle the effects of climate change.
(With agency input)