By Hellen Shikanda, NAIROBI
Kenya
United States (US) climate envoy John Kerry has said that the US will be damned if it pays any form of climate reparations to developing countries.
Despite his country being one
of the world's biggest emitters of greenhouse gases, he reiterated a statement
he made at a congressional hearing in July this year that under no
circumstances would his country be forced to pay climate reparations.
At a press conference with
journalists on the sidelines of the African Climate Summit, he said that while
he knew his country was one of the biggest polluters, all the world's
economies, including his own, were in the same predicament when it came to climate
change.
His statement at the congress
and when he spoke to heads of state contradicts his plans to be actively at the
forefront of ensuring that a Loss and Damage mechanism is put in place.
Loss and damage refers to the
irreparable effects of climate change that can neither be adapted to nor
mitigated.
During his presentation to
world leaders, Kerry insisted that the Loss and Damage process should be
completed in about a year and sympathised with people affected by
climate-related loss and damage.
However, in response to a
question from a Nation journalist, he said that his stance on
Loss and Damage payments, a form of climate reparations, is that the facility,
which was historically agreed at COP27, should not be designed in a
"punitive" way.
All he wants is for the Loss and Damage Facility to be exempt from any kind of civil liability that developed countries have to pay for.
"This is not a unique
position for the United States and many nations in the world. We have said we
are not going to create a liability structure on the court," he said.
"Changing the dynamics and everything we do in a very negative way. We are
not going to do that."
Kerry said the US believes
that there is loss and damage and that it is an important thing for responsible
nations to try to help countries that have been affected.
"Since 1988, the United
States and other countries have taken enormous steps to respond to this
reality. Mother Nature doesn't choose between the emissions of one country and
those of another. What affects Mother Nature is the total emissions that go
into the atmosphere," he said.
However, he said, the US is
proud to be the largest humanitarian donor in the world and has helped so many
other countries not only with climate emergencies, but also with health.
Earlier at the conference,
President William Ruto suggested that African countries need to adopt a carbon
tax, which would penalise companies for their contribution to greenhouse gas
emissions.
"It's clear that as a
result of procrastination and doing what we shouldn't have done, more and more
damage and injury is taking place. You have to be pretty blind not to see some
responsibility," he said.
"The US president and his
administration have not yet endorsed any carbon pricing mechanisms, but they
have directed us to look at the most prominent and the most possible and to
think about what the arguments are," he added.
Kerry said he personally supported and agreed with President Ruto's idea on carbon pricing.
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