John Kerry tells AP he backs UAE oil chief overseeing COP28
U.S. climate envoy John Kerry backs the United Arab
Emirates’ decision to appoint the CEO of a state-run oil company to preside
over the upcoming U.N. climate negotiations in Dubai, citing his work on
renewable energy projects.
In an interview Sunday with The Associated Press, the former
U.S. secretary of state acknowledged that the Emirates and other countries
relying on fossil fuels to fund their state coffers face finding “some balance”
ahead.
However, he dismissed the idea that Sultan al-Jaber’s
appointment should be automatically disqualified due to him leading the Abu
Dhabi National Oil Co. Activists, however, equated it to asking “arms dealers
to lead peace talks” when authorities announced his nomination Thursday.
“I think that Dr. Sultan al-Jaber is a terrific choice
because he is the head of the company. That company knows it needs to transition,”
Kerry said after attending an energy conference in the Emirati capital. “He
knows — and the leadership of the UAE is committed to transitioning.”
Still, Abu Dhabi plans to increase its production of crude
oil from 4 million barrels a day up to 5 million even while the UAE promises to
be carbon neutral by 2050 — a target that remains difficult to assess and one
that the Emirates still hasn’t fully explained how it will reach.
Kerry pointed to a speech al-Jaber gave Saturday in Abu
Dhabi, in which he called for the upcoming COP — or Conference of Parties — to
move “from goals to getting it done across mitigation, adaptation, finance and
loss and damage.” Al-Jaber also warned that the world “must be honest with
ourselves about how much progress we have actually achieved, and how much
further and faster we truly need to go.”
“He made it
absolutely clear we’re not moving fast enough. We have to reduce emissions. We
have to begin to accelerate this transition significantly,” Kerry said. “So I
have great confidence that the right issues are going to be on the table, that
they’re going to respond to them and lead countries to recognize their
responsibility.”
Each year, the country hosting the U.N. negotiations
nominates a person to chair the talks. Hosts typically pick a veteran diplomat
as the talks can be incredibly difficult to steer between competing nations and
their interests. The nominee’s position as “COP president” is confirmed by
delegates at the start of the talks, usually without objections.
Al-Jaber is a trusted confidant of UAE leader Sheikh
Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. He also led a once-ambitious project to erect a
$22 billion “carbon-neutral” city on Abu Dhabi’s outskirts — an effort later
pared back after the global financial crisis that struck the Emirates hard
beginning in 2008. Today, he also serves as the chairman of Masdar, a clean
energy company that grew out of the project and has spent or committed tens of
billions of dollars to projects worldwide.
Skepticism remains among activists over al-Jaber, however. A
call by countries, including India and the United States, for a phase down of
oil and natural gas never reached a public discussion during COP27 in the
Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh in November.
Activists worry that COP being held in a Mideast nation
reliant on fossil fuel sales for a second year in a row could see something
similar happen in the Emirates.
Asked about that fear, Kerry said: “I don’t believe UAE was
involved in changing that.”
“There’s going to be a level of scrutiny — and and I think
that’s going to be very constructive,” the former U.S. senator and 2004
presidential contender said. “It’s going to help people, you know, stay on the
line here.”
“I think this is a time, a new time of accountability,” he
added.
Still, the Emirates and the U.S. maintain close military
relations, regardless of the federation making policy decisions disliked by
Washington.
Dubai’s Jebel Ali Port is the most-used port of call for the
U.S. Navy outside of America. Some 3,500 American troops are deployed in the
country, including at Abu Dhabi’s Al Dhafra Air Base and a Navy outpost in
Fujairah. The UAE has some $29 billion in pending defense sales with the
Americans, including purchasing its most-advanced air defense system known by
the acronym THAAD.
For Europeans in particular, Russia’s war on Ukraine has led
to a reckoning on the continent’s reliance of Moscow’s natural gas to heat
their homes in the winter. Though aided by an unusually warm winter, Europeans
are trying to source gas elsewhere while also looking for renewables to fill
whatever gaps they can.
“No country is advantaged by having a petro-dictator be able
to control their future and their prices and their economy with reckless
behavior,” Kerry said, referring to Russian leader Vladimir Putin.
“To the degree there’s something that’s coming out of it
that will change things for the better, that is Europe’s deep commitment to big
reductions in emissions and to a whole shift in the nature of their energy
supply,” Kerry said.