Home COP28 COP28 Presidency announces Net-Zero Transition Charter The charter follows a technical report from the Global Stocktake, which showed that the world is off-track to keeping the goals of the Paris Agreement alive by Gulf Business November 2, 2023 Image: Supplied The COP28 Presidency has launched a charter to mobilise and encourage the private sector to take bolder action on climate and commit to greater credibility and accountability in their net-zero emissions pledges. The ‘Net-Zero Transition Charter: Accountability mobilisation for the private sector comes just weeks ahead of the COP28 conference, to be held in Dubai between November 30 and December 12. The charter follows a technical report from the Global Stocktake on September 8, which showed that the world is off-track to keeping the goals of the Paris Agreement alive. The charter recognises the important role the private sector must play in combatting climate change. The private sector accounts for approximately 80 percent of the global GDP, as well as the bulk of the world’s energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Dr Sultan bin Ahmed Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and COP28 President, said, “The private sector’s engagement in COP28 – their resources, expertise, and commitment – is vital in driving real-world action and achieving the ambitious climate goals set forth by the Presidency. For every pillar of our action agenda – fast-track the energy transition, fix climate finance, focus on nature, lives, and livelihoods, and full inclusivity – companies can leverage their strengths and resources to advance our collective climate goals and provide us with required solutions. “The Net-Zero Transition Charter will further enable the private sector to take meaningful action on climate, track progress and be held accountable. We have strong collaboration with the private sector already in the consultation and development of many of the outcomes of the action agenda – and I encourage all eligible private sector organisations to make this commitment and sign the Charter today.” The COP28 presidency has called for a collaborative approach to reduce emissions by 43 per cent in the next seven years, with all sorts of capital – public, private and philanthropic sources necessary to help solve the emissions gap more effectively. Dr Al Jaber continued, “Philanthropy equally has a crucial role; they raise awareness on climate issues, they can convene as a neutral partner and bring risk-free capital to fund climate opportunities. More importantly, they can be nimble and help fast-track solutions especially when partnering with public and private funders. Less than 2 percent of total philanthropic giving ($810bn in 2021) goes to climate and this is minuscule relative to the size of the problem we have. I hope to see many more philanthropists coming to COP28 and playing an active role in supporting climate causes and solutions.” Net-Zero Transition Charter requirements By joining the Net Zero Transition Charter, all organisations will commit to: Publicly set 1.5°C aligned, science-based, credible, and transparent Net-Zero 2050 and interim emissions’ reduction targets. Do this either through: A net-zero aligned national pledge or an internationally recognised net-zero initiative, that holds members to account for their net-zero pledges, or individually following a commensurate scope and level of ambition with public, third-party validation of their pledge through a generally accepted science-based review process. Those who have already made pledges as outlined above do not need to re-commit. Produce a credible net-zero transition plan, within one year of COP28. Publicly report annual Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and progress on their net-zero commitment and transition plan, including through high-quality platforms that feed into the United Nations Framework Convention Climate Change (UNFCCC) Global Climate Action Portal. The Net-Zero Transition Charter provides a stepping stone to the work currently being carried out by the UNFCCC in the creation of the ‘Recognition Accountability Framework for non-Party Stakeholders’, which was first announced at the Bonn Climate Change Conference in June. By signing the charter or committing to a net-zero-aligned national pledge, organisations will be acknowledged as signatories in the run-up to COP28. Companies who meet all required criteria by 15th November 2023, will be featured on the COP28 website. All signatories will be required to have the appropriate documentation and undertake the necessary steps to align with the charter’s provisions. To ensure transparency and accountability, a progress report will be issued by December 2024 to verify that signatories have taken the necessary actions outlined in the charter. Signatories that do not meet the charter’s requirements, will be delisted from the COP28 website and the COP28 progress report. Organisations can read and sign the Net-Zero Transition Charter through the COP28 official website. Read: Insights: Why we must double down on energy efficiency to honour Paris Agreement Tags Cop 28 Net-Zero Transition Charter COP28 News Sustainability You might also like Saudi Arabia’s first opera house is being built here ADNOC to buy OCI stake in Fertiglobe for $3.62bn Charging ahead: 63% of UAE residents want to drive EVs by 2025 Here are 5 key takeaways from the COP28 climate summit