TIME'S UP — The UN's climate summit in Dubai has gone into overtime as negotiators struggle to reach consensus on the future of fossil fuels in the broader effort to fight global warming. After a promising start, COP28 lost momentum amid conflict between those pushing for an end to oil and gas production and use and those seeking less severe steps. As of Monday, the prospect of bridging that gap was looking bleak, with organizers of the climate summit releasing a draft proposal that suggested reducing use of fossil fuels instead of phasing them out, our Karl Mathieson, Zia Weise and Sara Schonhardt reported from Dubai. During a closed-door meeting that ran Monday and into Tuesday, U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said the draft text “really doesn’t meet the expectations of this COP in terms of the urgently needed transition to clean sources of energy and the phaseout of fossil fuels.” The European Union, vulnerable island nations and environmental groups have all been pushing for stronger language. The problem at hand: Countries like China and India have said they are against language that proposes phasing out or phasing down specific energy resources. Anything short of an agreement to phase out fossil fuels would be a disappointment to clmate activists, who said before COP28 that the talks would be a failure if they did not call for phasing out the production of coal, oil and natural gas. “The world desperately needs to phase out fossil fuels as quickly as possible, but this obsequious draft reads as if OPEC dictated it word for word,” former U.S. Vice President Al Gore said in a statement on Monday. “It is even worse than many had feared.” The text released included a list of measures that nations would agree to pursue — voluntarily — including tripling global capacity of renewables by 2030, doubling the rate of energy savings through efficiency measures, “rapidly phasing down unabated coal” and limiting licenses for new power plants. It avoided the demands to “phase out” fossil fuels, instead suggesting that countries commit to “reducing both consumption and production of fossil fuels … so as to achieve net zero by, before, or around 2050.”
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