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“We remain interested in a political discussion on the role of markets in the 2015 agreement here in Warsaw,” he added.
Reaction to the breakdown in talks was mixed.
“The profound lack of progress is obviously disappointing. We hope the parties regroup and find a way to progress the (talks) as soon as possible,” said Miles Austin of trade group the Climate Markets & Investment Association.
Meena Raman of green group alliance Third World Network welcomed the news: “Given the grave lack of ambition from developed countries to reduce emissions.”
Poorer nations, which bear the brunt of the worst effects of climate change, want rich governments to take on more ambitious and binding emissions reduction targets.
Review the failures
Rich nations including the United States, Japan, and members of the EU, favour designing new market-based mechanisms to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as cheaply as possible.
But developing countries are reluctant to launch new markets when existing ones are not working. They say rich nations support markets as a way of outsourcing carbon-cutting efforts abroad to ensure they don’t have to make any reductions at home.
“We need to review the failures of existing carbon markets to assess if they have any role to play in equitable and ambitious mitigation,” Raman said.
The Clean Development Mechanism, one market born from the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, lets governments and companies in developed countries invest in carbon-cutting projects in developing nations, and in return they receive carbon offsets that they can use against their own emissions targets.
While the scheme has channelled more than $ 315 billion to developing countries, it is faltering due to a dearth of demand for offsets from countries that are reluctant to raise their ambition under a new global pact.
Environment ministers will discuss carbon markets on Tuesday, but observers said nothing on new markets was likely to be agreed.
“(It’s) not a huge loss,” said one negotiator from the developing world who requested anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the press.
“We want to see a new market mechanism, but one that’s designed to generate substantial net reductions the atmosphere actually sees, rather than a tool that relocates effort in a zero-sum game. So the outcome is disappointing from this perspective.”