1. 巴西、南非、印度和中國四國部長(cháng)代表基礎四國集團于2023年9月20日在紐約氣候雄心峰會(huì )期間舉行會(huì )議,各國部長(cháng)一致認為,應對氣候變化挑戰必須在可持續發(fā)展和全球治理變革的背景下,堅定地以《聯(lián)合國氣候變化框架公約》(以下簡(jiǎn)稱(chēng)《公約》)及其《京都議定書(shū)》和《巴黎協(xié)定》的目標、原則和規定為基礎。會(huì )議由巴西環(huán)境與氣候變化部長(cháng)瑪麗娜·席爾瓦女士主持,出席會(huì )議的有南非共和國森林、漁業(yè)和環(huán)境部部長(cháng)芭芭拉·克里西女士、中國生態(tài)環(huán)境部副部長(cháng)趙英民先生和印度常駐聯(lián)合國副代表拉溫德拉大使。
2. 部長(cháng)們認識到,氣候變化是我們所處時(shí)代最大的挑戰之一,應對這一挑戰需要推進(jìn)可持續發(fā)展,調動(dòng)全人類(lèi)的資源,解決國家內部和國家之間的結構性不平等,同時(shí)為向低碳和氣候韌性社會(huì )公正轉型鋪平道路。
3. 部長(cháng)們深切關(guān)注單邊主義、貿易保護主義和國際合作支離破碎的趨勢有損信任,進(jìn)而危及富有雄心的氣候行動(dòng),承諾將加強和深化基礎四國的領(lǐng)導力和聯(lián)合行動(dòng),旨在減少溫室氣體排放、提升適應氣候變化、增強抵御氣候變化不利影響的韌性、促進(jìn)不受阻礙地技術(shù)轉讓并增強科學(xué)的氣候知識,特別是通過(guò)在發(fā)展中國家創(chuàng )造本地價(jià)值和提升當地能力。
4. 部長(cháng)們敦促?lài)H社會(huì )團結一致,共同站出來(lái),攜手應對氣候變化。他們指出,實(shí)現聯(lián)合國可持續發(fā)展目標(SDGs)必須成為國際社會(huì )的核心優(yōu)先事項,因為2030年可持續發(fā)展議程提供了社會(huì )、經(jīng)濟和環(huán)境的一攬子系統性長(cháng)期解決方案,以應對氣候變化的復雜性。他們強調,社會(huì )經(jīng)濟挑戰給發(fā)展中國家帶來(lái)了系統性風(fēng)險,為實(shí)現《公約》最終目標及其《巴黎協(xié)定》長(cháng)期目標,必須解決這些風(fēng)險。他們呼吁全球團結一致,確保沒(méi)有一個(gè)國家、地區或個(gè)人掉隊。他們重申,基礎四國愿為應對氣候挑戰盡最大努力作出貢獻并與所有國家展開(kāi)合作。
5. 為打破氣候行動(dòng)的惰性,部長(cháng)們同意通過(guò)增強基礎四國的領(lǐng)導力,為《公約》第28次締約方大會(huì )(COP28)到第30次締約方大會(huì )(COP30)和之后的基礎四國合作提出新的愿景,其中包括:一是加強基礎四國在國際氣候變化議程上協(xié)調,聚焦《公約》下多邊氣候制度;二是充分利用各國的科學(xué)和學(xué)術(shù)對話(huà);三是拓展在實(shí)施可持續發(fā)展和項目上的聯(lián)合行動(dòng)與合作。
6. 部長(cháng)們強調,盡管在全球經(jīng)濟衰退和經(jīng)濟復蘇時(shí)期面臨著(zhù)巨大的發(fā)展挑戰和消除貧困的壓力,但基礎四國將繼續以身作則,在可持續發(fā)展要務(wù)背景下,展現其氣候行動(dòng)最高雄心:
7. 部長(cháng)們強調基礎四國集團對所有其他發(fā)展中國家的有力承諾和團結立場(chǎng),包括在“77國集團和中國”下開(kāi)展更緊密合作。他們重申對古巴作為“77國集團和中國”輪值主席的支持,旨在加強集團團結,維護所有發(fā)展中國家的共同利益。
8. 部長(cháng)們強調《公約》是應對氣候變化主要多邊渠道。部長(cháng)們承諾,基礎四國將全力支持巴西未來(lái)?yè)螌⒂?025年在亞馬遜地區帕拉州首府貝倫市舉行的COP30主席。他們還全力支持阿拉伯聯(lián)合酋長(cháng)國擔任將于2023年11月30日至12月12日在迪拜舉行的COP28主席國。他們強調,COP28首次全球盤(pán)點(diǎn)(GST)成果對于加強國際合作以及為各國以自主決定的方式更新和加強其國家自主貢獻提供信息至關(guān)重要。他們期待在2025年舉行的COP30上在《巴黎協(xié)定》下提交第二輪國家自主貢獻。他們承諾將共同努力,確保COP28到COP30的《公約》多邊進(jìn)程能夠為團結國際社會(huì )、加強實(shí)施《公約》及其《巴黎協(xié)定》提供平臺。他們還強調COP28取得富有雄心、公平、務(wù)實(shí)、全面和平衡成果的重要性,包括首次全球盤(pán)點(diǎn)、運行新的損失與損害基金、新的集體量化資金目標討論取得進(jìn)展、通過(guò)強有力的全球適應目標框架、以及實(shí)施減緩雄心和實(shí)施工作方案,并通過(guò)公正轉型路徑的工作方案。他們強調,COP28的各個(gè)方面都應側重于通過(guò)加強實(shí)施手段來(lái)彌補實(shí)施的缺口。
9. 部長(cháng)們強調了營(yíng)造國際有利環(huán)境對于增強全球氣候行動(dòng)的重要性,同時(shí)允許各國根據共同但有區別的責任及各自能力原則,考慮不同國情,提交反映其最高雄心的新一輪國家自主貢獻及展示相對此前國家自主貢獻的進(jìn)步。他們進(jìn)一步強調,全球金融架構迫切需要全面轉型和現代化,包括對多邊開(kāi)發(fā)銀行進(jìn)行系統改革,使其適合支持可持續發(fā)展、生態(tài)轉型和公正、公平轉型的目的。他們表示有必要解決對投資發(fā)展中國家投資的風(fēng)險規避傾向,有必要優(yōu)先考慮贈款支持,有必要大幅降低所有發(fā)展中國家的資本成本,因為目前的借貸成本和條件使得包括基礎四國在內的世界大多數人口無(wú)法獲得多邊支持。
10. 部長(cháng)們敦促發(fā)達國家遵守公平、共同但有區別的責任和各自能力的原則,擴大提升自身氣候行動(dòng)實(shí)現氣候中和且不再推遲,并向發(fā)展中國家提供新的、額外的、持續的、可預測的、充足的和及時(shí)的資金支持。他們強調發(fā)展中國家需要數萬(wàn)億美元,優(yōu)惠貸款對于發(fā)展中國家疏解財政困境很重要。他們進(jìn)一步敦促發(fā)達國家履行其尚未兌現的氣候出資義務(wù),包括實(shí)現到2020年每年緊急聯(lián)合調動(dòng)1000億美元的目標并延續至2025年,到2025年將其向發(fā)展中國家提供的用于適應氣候變化的集體資金從2019年的水平至少翻倍,并盡早提出明確的路線(xiàn)圖,同時(shí)承諾一個(gè)新的集體量化目標,該目標應遠超過(guò)每年1000億美元的最低標準,并為損失和損害資金安排及基金提供資金。他們回顧相關(guān)報告指出,發(fā)展中國家每年需要數萬(wàn)億美元用于減緩和適應行動(dòng),而且由于不公平、掠奪性貿易條款及歷史和現行的非收益性原材料出口依賴(lài)等因素,預計每年有2萬(wàn)億美元資金流出發(fā)展中國家,支撐了發(fā)達國家的發(fā)展。部長(cháng)們還關(guān)切地注意到,近年來(lái)發(fā)達國家的化石燃料生產(chǎn)和消費大幅增加,并鼓勵發(fā)達國家加速率先逐步淘汰本國的化石燃料生產(chǎn)和消費。
11. 他們表示堅決反對變相限制國際貿易的單邊、強制性措施,并呼吁所有合作伙伴為努力尋求合作解決方案和伙伴關(guān)系,促進(jìn)可持續產(chǎn)品和服務(wù)的生產(chǎn)和貿易準入。部長(cháng)們認可發(fā)達國家在其國內為脫碳所作出的努力和取得的部分成果。然而,他們強調,在國際上,發(fā)達國家有選擇性的、不充分的、通常無(wú)效的行動(dòng)損害了信心,進(jìn)而使科學(xué)脫碳集體行動(dòng)的速度和規模受到損害,這向我們指出更大承諾和有效執行的必要性。他們強調,我們需要突破已有成果,以取得必要的成果。
12. 基礎四國部長(cháng)們決心在所有國家之間建立信任,承諾擴大、深化和多樣化各國的共同努力,推動(dòng)強化全球治理體系并提升其有效性,以加強《公約》及其《京都議定書(shū)》和《巴黎協(xié)定》下既有的原則和目標的實(shí)施。他們表示將堅定致力于營(yíng)造一個(gè)有利于可持續發(fā)展的國際環(huán)境,這將有助于包容的、公平的全球決策進(jìn)程,有效代表人類(lèi)的集體智慧和發(fā)展意愿,以實(shí)現共同繁榮。
BASIC Ministerial joint statement on Climate Change
20 September 2023
1. Ministers of Brazil, South Africa, India and China, representing the BASIC Group, met on 20 September 2023 at the margins of the Climate Ambition Summit, in New York, united by their shared vision that the fight against climate change must be firmly based on the goals, principles and provisions of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), its Kyoto Protocol and its Paris Agreement, in the context of sustainable development and the transformation of global governance. The meeting was chaired by H.E. Ms. Marina Silva, Minister of Environment and Climate Change of Brazil, and attended by H.E. Ms. Barbara Creecy, Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment of South Africa; H.E. Mr. Zhao Yingmin, Vice-Minister of Ecology and Environment of China; and Ambassador R. Ravindra, Deputy Permanent Representative of Permanent Mission of India to the United Nations.
2. Ministers recognized that climate change represents one of the greatest challenges of our time and that addressing it requires progress towards sustainable development and the mobilization of all of humanity’s resources to tackle structural inequalities within and among countries, while paving the way for just transitions towards low-carbon and climate resilient societies.
3. Deeply concerned that trends towards unilateralism, trade protectionism and fragmentation of international cooperation jeopardizes trust and, consequently, ambitious climate action, the Ministers pledged to strengthen and deepen BASIC leadership and joint work in actions aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions, improving adaptation and resilience to the adverse effects of climate change, promoting unhindered technology transfer, and enhancing scientific climate knowledge, in particular through the creation of local value and the development of local capabilities in developing countries.
4. Ministers urged the international community to come together in a united front to combat climate change. They noted that achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) must be the central priority for the international community, as the 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development provides the systemic and long-term set of social, economic and environmental solutions that the complexity of climate change requires. They underscored that socioeconomic challenges pose systemic risks for developing countries, which must be addressed for achieving the ultimate objective of the UNFCCC and the long-term goals of its Paris Agreement. They called for global solidarity in ensuring that no country, place nor individual is left behind. They reiterated that BASIC is willing and ready to genuinely contribute its best effort and cooperate with all countries in addressing the climate challenge.
5. To break inertia in climate action, Ministers agreed to strengthening BASIC leadership, by launching a new vision on cooperation among BASIC from COP28 to COP30 and beyond that encompasses: firstly, enhancing BASIC coordination on the international climate change agenda, with a focus on the multilateral climate regime under UNFCCC; secondly, leveraging their countries scientific and academic dialogue; and, thirdly, expanding joint action and cooperation on sustainable development implementation and projects.
6. Ministers highlighted that despite the enormous developmental challenges and pressures of poverty eradication at a time of global economic downturn and economic recovery, the BASIC countries continue to lead by example and will demonstrate their highest ambition on climate action, in the context of their overarching sustainable development imperatives:
Brazil is back on the international agenda in 2023, raising the fight against climate change as a priority for the Brazilian government, alongside efforts to combat hunger, poverty and inequality. Deeply committed to strengthening multilateralism, Brazil has offered to host the 30th Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC (COP30) in the Amazonian city of Belém. Also driven by the sense of urgency and gravity that the best available science warns us to, Brazil has offered to host the Amazon Summit, also in Belém, in August 2023. The "Belém Declaration" is the first ever political document to recognize the risk of the Amazon's tipping-point. Since President Lula took office, Brazil has committed itself to "zero deforestation," while relaunching the Amazon Fund and the Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Deforestation in the Legal Amazon (PPCDAm), as well as the Inter-ministerial Committee on Climate Change (CIM), which has decided to adjust Brazil's NDC to the absolute levels originally presented in 2015. Brazil's adjusted NDC will enhance the country's emissions reduction ambition from 37% to 48% by 2025, compared to 2005, and from 50% to 53% by 2030. In August 2023, the Brazilian government announced an economy-wide "Ecological Transformation Plan," which consolidates the country's vision for a future of economic growth, with social inclusion and environmental preservation. In the first eight months of the new government, deforestation fell by 48%, which means that this alone has prevented around 200 million tons of carbon from being emitted. While committed to the principle of CBDR-RC, Brazil is also clear about its equally differentiated responsibility towards the most vulnerable countries, and will stand up fully to its responsibilities.
South Africa is guided by its National Development Plan, in the context of efforts to address the triple challenges of poverty, inequality and unemployment, as well as by its national framework on Just Transition and specific strategies, legislation and regulations addressing climate adaptation and mitigation. South Africa is undertaking the development of a comprehensive Adaptation Investment Plan to identify priority measures for the implementation of its National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy. A dedicated oceans and coast adaptation plan has been developed, as well as an Adaptation sectoral plan and risk and vulnerability assessment of all district municipalities. The Just Energy Transition Investment Plan (JET-IP) has been refined and parliament is finalising its climate change bill. South Africa is currently implementing a number of climate change mitigation interventions to facilitate implementation of its Low Emission Development Strategy, including the allocation of sectoral emissions reduction targets. Intensive work is underway on policy reforms and improving energy security and access, with progress towards larger-scale deployment of renewable energy. The JET-IP outlines the enormous scale and nature of investments needed to achieve decarbonisation goals. According to the plan, South Africa will need the investment of approximately US$98 billion over the next five years to enable part of the just transition and achieve the ambitious targets it has set out in its NDC. It also includes investment in local production of green hydrogen and electric vehicles, and investing in local economies to develop skills and enable economic diversification. This partnership presents an opportunity to develop a new and innovative model for financial support for just transitions in developing countries.
India displayed its spirit of multilateralism by calling upon G-20 nations to adopt a constructive attitude to fight climate change. India also urged that ambition for climate action must be matched with actions on climate finance and transfer of technology. This clarion call to nations was made with a vision of ‘One Earth, One Family, One Future’ to foster stronger international cooperation in combating common global challenges such as climate change. India has overachieved one of its NDC commitments by already meeting 40% of its installed power capacity from non-fossil fuel based sources almost nine years ahead of its committed time. India is on track to achieve other NDC goals. India is now implementing the National Green Hydrogen Mission, with the target is to reach an annual production of 5 MMT by 2030. India continues to insist that global carbon budget for maintaining the temperature increase within levels mandated by the Paris Agreement is a finite resource to which all Parties should have equitable access. Since developed countries have used more than their fair share of the global carbon budget, they should take lead in undertaking ambitious climate actions, including mitigation of emissions, and provide means of implementation support to developing countries as mandated under the UNFCCC and Paris Agreement.
China attaches great importance to addressing climate change, has formulated the 1+N policies and is committed to working actively and prudently toward the goals of reaching peak carbon emissions and carbon neutrality. China’s carbon intensity in 2021 was 50.8 percent less than that in 2005. China gives priority to the development of non-fossil energy. The total installed capacity of non-fossil energy power generation in China exceeded 1.4 billion kilowatts, counting for more than 51% of the total installed capacity amount. China provides 50% of the world's wind power equipment and 80% of the world's solar power generation equipment, making outstanding contributions to the reduction of global renewable energy costs. China has more than 16 million new-energy vehicles, counting for more than half of the worldwide amount. China launched the largest carbon market covering greenhouse gas emissions in the world. China has proactively adapted to climate change and has taken various measures to build up the carbon sink capacity of ecosystems, and achieved “double growth” in forest coverage and stock for the past 30 years. China has announced that it will strongly support the green and low-carbon development in developing countries by south-south cooperation and will stop building new coal-fired power projects overseas, demonstrating its concrete actions in response to climate change.
7. Ministers confirmed BASIC’s strong commitment and solidarity to all other developing countries, including by working closer together within the Group of 77 and China (G77+China). They reiterated their support for Cuba, as the current Chair of the G77+China, with a view to strengthening the unity of the group and advancing the common interests of all developing countries.
8. Ministers highlighted that the UNFCCC is the principal multilateral body for addressing climate change. Ministers pledged BASIC’s strong support to Brazil’s prospective presidency of COP30, in 2025, in the Amazon city of Belém do Pará. They also fully supported the United Arab Emirates Presidency of COP28, which will take place in Dubai, from 30 November to 12 December 2023. They underscored that the outcome of the first Global Stocktake (GST) at COP28 will be crucial to reinforce international cooperation and inform countries in updating and enhancing, in a nationally determined manner, their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). They look forward to presenting their second NDCs to the Paris Agreement by 2025, when COP30 will be held. They committed to working together to ensure that the UNFCCC multilateral process from COP28 to COP30 provides a platform to unite the international community around enhancing the implementation of the Convention and its Paris Agreement. They also underscored the importance of COP28 delivering an ambitious, equitable, pragmatic, comprehensive and balanced outcome, including the first GST, the operationalization of the new Loss and Damage Fund, progress on the deliberations on the New Collective Quantified Finance Goal, the adoption of a robust framework for the Global Goal on Adaptation, as well as the implementation of the Mitigation Ambition and Implementation Work Programme (MWP) and the adoption of the Work Programme on Just Transition Pathways. They highlighted all dimensions of COP28 should focus on addressing implementation gaps through enhanced means of implementation.
9. Ministers underscored the critical importance of creating an international enabling environment for unlocking enhanced global climate action, whilst empowering countries to present their most ambitious next round of NDCs and to demonstrate progression relative to their earlier NDCs, based on the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances. They further underscored the urgent need for a fundamental transformation and modernization of the global financial architecture, including a systematic reform of the multilateral development banks to make them fit-for-purpose in supporting sustainable development, ecological transformation, and just and equitable transitions. They recalled the necessity of addressing risk aversion in investing in developing countries, of prioritizing grant support, and of dramatically lowering the cost of capital in all developing countries, as current cost and conditionality on borrowing money makes multilateral support out of reach of the majority of the world’s population, including in BASIC countries.
10. Ministers urged developed countries to abide by the principles of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities and to scale up climate actions for them to reach climate neutrality without further delay and provide new and additional, sustained, predictable, adequate and timely finance to developing countries. They recalled that needs of developing countries are in trillions of USD, and concessional finance is crucial to avoid fiscal distress among developing countries. They further urged developed countries to honor their unfulfilled climate finance obligations, including delivering on the goal of jointly mobilizing USD 100 billion per year urgently by 2020 and through to 2025, at least doubling their collective provision of climate finance for adaptation to developing countries from 2019 levels by 2025, and putting forward a clear roadmap as early as possible, whilst committing to a new collective quantified goal that goes well beyond the floor of USD 100 billion per year and providing finance for the Loss and Damage funding arrangements and Fund. They recall the reports showing that trillions of USD are needed annually by developing countries for mitigation and adaptation actions and that an estimated two trillion dollars flow out of developing countries to feed development in the developed countries each year, due to factors such as unfair and exploitative terms of trade and historical and current dependency on the export of un-beneficiated raw materials. The Ministers also noted with concern that there has been a significant increase in the production and consumption of fossil fuels by developed countries in recent years, and encouraged them to take the lead in phasing-out their own fossil fuel production and consumption, in an accelerated manner.
11. Ministers expressed their strong rejection of unilateral and coercive measures that constitute a disguised restriction on international trade, and called on all partners to strive for cooperative solutions and partnerships for stimulating the production and trade access for sustainable goods and services. Ministers recognized existing efforts and partial results towards decarbonization by developed countries at the domestic level. They underscored, nevertheless, that at the international level selective, insufficient, and often ineffective action by developed countries has undermined confidence and, consequently, speed and scale in collective action for the decarbonization recommended by science, which points out to all of us the need for greater commitments and effective implementation. They highlighted we need to break the inertia of the results already obtained in order to leverage the results that are necessary.
12. Determined to building trust among all countries, BASIC Ministers committed to broadening, deepening and diversifying their joint efforts towards a strengthened and effective global governance for the implementation of the principles and goals enshrined under the UNFCCC, its Kyoto Protocol and its Paris Agreement. They expressed their firm commitment to contributing to an international environment that is conducive to sustainable development and to inclusive and equitable global decision-making processes that are effectively representative of humanity’s collective intelligence and development aspirations, with a view to shared prosperity.