The Jakarta Globe, 16 February 2010
Murad Qureshi
The Muslim World and Climate Change
Speaking
at a meeting of the Organization of Islamic States in Istanbul in
November, Bangladeshi President Zillur Rahman called on the
Organization of the Islamic Conference to take a lead in combating
climate change and to support countries like Bangladesh that are
fighting global warming even though they contribute little to its
cause.
Up to now, the OIC’s record in responding to this call
has been poor. A 2007 study concluded that “efforts by wealthier Muslim
states are imbalanced, with many of them doing very little and not
acknowledging the urgency of the issue. Saudi Arabia, who holds most of
the purse strings of the OIC, has long been a skeptic of climate
change.”
Indeed, the response of Saudi Arabia’s lead
climate-change negotiator at Copenhagen to e-mails leaked by the
University of East Anglia was to say that “It appears from the details
of the scandal that there is no relationship whatsoever between human
activities and climate change.”
Looking at annual carbon
emissions per capita in the Persian Gulf states, it is immediately
apparent that the figures are much worse than even for the United
States, which is usually seen as the villain of the piece. For example,
according to the International Energy Agency, Qatar’s annual emissions
stand at 58 metric tons per capita, the United Arab Emirates’ at 29.9,
Bahrain’s at 28.2 and Kuwait’s at 25.1, whereas the figure for the
United States is 19.1. These emissions are even more astonishing when
compared with the figure for Bangladesh, which stands at 0.25 of a
metric ton per capita. It makes you wonder what is being done in these
rich Arab Gulf states to produce such huge emissions.
As for
discussions on climate change among the Arab states, here again the
problem is the reluctance of the ruling elites in oil-rich countries to
support any measures that might reduce demand for oil. This is despite
the fact that the Middle East is particularly vulnerable to rising
temperatures, with vast areas of agricultural land between Egypt and
Iraq expected to lose fertility as a result of global warming.
In
November, at the launch of the UN Population Fund report on climate
change in Cairo, UNFPA officials pointed out that 15 percent of people
in the Arab world already have limited or no access to potable water
and that water scarcity induced by climate change was expected to cut
food production in the region by half. They called for more cooperation
among the Arab League, the UNFPA and Arab nongovernmental organizations
to help governments draw up appropriate policies.
A report
released in November by the Lebanon-based Arab Forum for Environment
and Development criticized the near-total lack of research data on
climate change in Arab countries and called on Arab nations immediately
to draw up adaptation and mitigation plans. One of the authors said,
“We have no data about the effects that the greenhouse-gas emissions in
the atmosphere will have on our coastal zones, even though we know they
are very vulnerable,” adding that this makes creating plans to reduce
risks from climate change difficult.
We have come to expect
very little from the OIC in major global environmental summits such as
the Copenhagen talks. We hear much talk about the importance of the
“ummah” as the basis for international unity among Muslims, but the
oil-rich states have so far shown little sense of unity with their
co-religionists over such a critical issue for mankind as global
warming.
In addition to reaching an agreement on limiting
global warming to 2 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels, the
other bone of contention at the Copenhagen summit was clearly money —
that is, how much wealthy countries should be paying poor ones to help
them deal with climate change.
Given the huge sovereign funds
that many of the oil-rich Muslim-majority states are sitting on,
derived in essence from the sale of hydrocarbons, and given that the
burning of these fuels makes a major contribution to greenhouse gases,
you might think the oil producers would feel some moral obligation to
the nations that suffer the consequences of global warming.
Moreover,
at present the huge funds that the oil producers possess are usually
invested in property and assets in the developed world, when investment
in the developing world in green industries and the low-carbon economy
could well give them better returns and certainly a better conscience.
Now that would be a grand idea for all those funds standing idle in
bank accounts in the world’s major cities. In the meantime, some zakat
to those on the front line of climate change in such countries as
Maldives and Bangladesh is surely not too much to ask.
Murad Qureshi, a British Labor Party member, is a minister of the London Assembly.
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