Group Rejects Appointment of Sultan Al Jabar As COP 28 President

By Ruth Tene Natsa, Abuja

Activists on the Platform of Oilwatch International have decried the appointment of Sultan Al Jaber as COP28 President.

Al Jaber serves as the minister of industry and advanced technology for the United Arabs Emirates (UAE) and is also the chief of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc), which is the world’s twelfth-largest oil company by production.

They said the announcement of the oil chief, as the president clearly shows that COP28 is highly compromised as the conference is meant to tackle global warming, not compound it. Adding that the appointment is certain to lock in false and risky solutions in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) process.

In a statement to EarthnewsNigeria, the Organisation stated that “Oilwatch frowns at the choice of the head of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company in United Arab Emirate (UAE) to preside over COP28, noting that past COPs have had the overbearing presence of delegates from the fossil fuels sector.

“Having the head of an oil company as the president of any COP is a form of climate denial. At a time when the world should make every effort to shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy, this appointment is a clear indication of climate change denial. Indeed, at COP27 held in El Sharm Sheikh, Egypt, the sector had more delegates than any single country” they said

Nnimmo Bassey member Oilwatch international steering committee stated that “The last two COPs crawled with delegates from the fossil fuels sector and they have been responsible for blocking real climate action or derailing negotiations. Their heavy presence has led to the COP being unable to call for a fossil fuels phaseout — even though it is the sensible thing to do.

“Now UAE spits in the face of flooded, drowning, and other climate-impacted nations by appointing the chief among polluters to preside over COP28. We call on the UAE to rescind this appointment”.

It is the time to kick polluters out of the COP, not a time to make them the chief directors of proceedings. If they maintain this appointment, the COP would have earned its title as a Conference of Polluters”.

The coordinator of Oilwatch Africa, Salome Nduta stated that “The appointment of Abu Dhabi chief or that of anybody who has an interest in oil will definitely gag genuine discussions on the protection of the environment. It is a deliberate attempt to reverse minimal gains made so far, oil companies who are the main polluters and violators of rights should not be made to be the judge in a matter against it. Entrusting one of their own is a blatant violation of rights and conflict of interest”.

The coordinator of Oilwatch International, Kentebe Ebiraidor, in his reaction stated “It is amusing to have the chair of a multinational company play host for COP28. This has shown that the discussions would be centered on profit over people, and it is a clear indication that COP28 has been billed to fail before it begins.

This is also a clear indication that the communities and the environment will suffer because the decisions that would come out its discussion which will in no way be meaningful nor in favour of the people.

“Oilwatch International asks that UAE retrace its decision by changing the president of the COP”.

This announcement confirms the fears of civil society and climate Justice movements that the COP must be replaced by a People’s’ conference on climate change in similar to the conference on climate change and the Rights of Mother Earth which took place at Cochabamba, Bolivia, in April 2010. This hypocrisy must stop.

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