Home Climate UAE launches climate ‘troika’ with future COP presidencies Azerbaijan, Brazil Past and future UN climate conference hosts the UAE, Azerbaijan and Brazil announced a “troika” with an aim to keep the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, alive by Reuters February 14, 2024 Image credit: COP28/X COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber said on Monday that the UAE would be launching the COP Presidencies’ Troika, along with Azerbaijan the host of COP29 and Brazil the host of COP30, to maintain momentum. “We must use every milestone on the road from Dubai to Baku to Belem to double down on action and turn rhetoric into results.” The government of Azerbaijan appointed its ecology and natural resources minister Mukhtar Babayev as the president of COP29 to be held in Baku in November. Success of COP28 Jaber reiterated the need for the energy sector to participate in the energy transition and the progress made at the U.N. climate summit that was hosted by Dubai in December. He said the energy industry’s presence and commitment made the action agenda more meaningful. “History will remember that this was the first COP that agreed to transition away from fossil fuels,” Jaber said at the World Government Summit in Dubai. Representatives from nearly 200 countries had agreed at the COP28 climate summit to begin reducing global consumption of fossil fuels to avert the worst of climate change. Jaber said that in order for the UAE consensus agreement to get traction, serious action was needed. “We need to show that an unprecedented agreement can be turned into unprecedented action. We are what we do, not what we say.” Climate activists had criticised the presence of oil and gas companies at the summit being held in the UAE. Building a bridge Jaber, who is also chief of state oil giant ADNOC, said his background in all forms of energy was ultimately beneficial. “My experience across all forms of energy turned out to be an asset,” he said, stressing that ADNOC had a net zero goal for 2045 and was increasing new energies investments to $23 billion. The UAE is increasing its oil capacity to five million barrels per day (bpd) by 2027, but Jaber stressed this was not an increase in actual production. “We produce less than one-fifth of the largest producer of oil in the world, the US,” he said. Read: Global temperatures cross 1.5 degrees C threshold over 12 months Tags Azerbaijan Brazil climate change CLIMATE CONFERENCE COP28 COP28 conference UAE You might also like Beyond the horizon: How to future-proof the legacy of UAE family businesses Standard Chartered expands private banking team in the UAE UAE finalises pact to boost trade with Eurasian Economic Union UAE set to roll out 15% tax for global corporate giants