The
Vaccination Gap Is Jeopardizing Climate Action
Mar 24, 2021 Justin Vaïsse
Failure to heal divisions over vaccine availability for developing
countries could poison the well of global cooperation and imperil the COP26
climate negotiations. Advanced economies should therefore offer the Global
South a “solidarity package” encompassing vaccine distribution, debt relief,
and climate goals.
PARIS – Will negotiators from the Global South be barred from attending the
United Nations climate
summit (COP26) in Glasgow in November because they are not
vaccinated against COVID-19? This scenario will not arise, one hopes, because
developing-country officials will almost certainly receive their shots in
advance. But whether they will want to negotiate with rich economies that have
been hoarding vaccines is less clear, where global climate negotiations could
become collateral damage of vaccine nationalism. In normal times, the bone of
contention between rich and poor countries was who should bear the brunt of
efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. But the pandemic has already pushed
back climate talks by a year, and now threatens to create an additional
North-South rift.
In January, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, in his last month as
chair of the African Union, lambasted developed countries for ordering
vaccines amounting to “up to four times what their population needs.” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of
the World Health Organization, warned of a possible “catastrophic moral
failure” owing to unequal vaccine distribution. And both the Anglican
Archbishop of Cape Town, Thabo Makgoba, and UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima have denounced the current global “vaccine apartheid.”
Failure to heal divisions over vaccine availability for developing
countries could poison the well of global coordination and imperil the COP26
climate negotiations. The Global South accepted the principle of “common but
differentiated responsibilities” in addressing climate change 30 years ago. But
it might view the North’s vaccine selfishness as a sign of irresponsibility on
the immediate vital issue of health – and refuse to engage in the necessary
give-and-take in combating global warming.
The vaccine-induced erosion of collective responsibility, together with the
economic impact of the pandemic, could result in countries announcing very
disappointing “nationally determined contributions” to reduce CO2
emissions in the run-up to COP26. This risk is compounded by rich and poor
countries’ differing priorities. Whereas the developed North puts tackling
global warming first, health and development often take precedence in the
Global South.
In this regard, US President Joe Biden has tasked Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen
with promoting “debt relief initiatives that are aligned with and support the
goals of the Paris Agreement” – in other words, green conditionality for debt
reduction, restructuring, and cancellation. But developing economies that have
suffered severely in the COVID-19 crisis and seen their development prospects
stall might perceive such schemes as an extra burden imposed by the North.
What should be done? At their February 19 virtual meeting, G7 leaders agreed to provide an additional $4 billion to
shore up the international Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator and the
COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access (COVAX) facility, which aims to ensure rapid,
fair, and equitable provision of vaccines to people everywhere.
This is a good start. But advanced economies should go further and offer
the Global South a “solidarity package” encompassing vaccine distribution, debt
relief, and climate goals, with the objective of securing fair and balanced
efforts from all governments on all three fronts. Rich countries should
recognize that, while they are negotiating over the transfer of hundreds of
billions of dollars from North to South for climate action in the coming years,
it would take only $10-20 billion to fund COVAX fully.
In order to prevent the North-South divide from widening further, leaders
should announce the first part of that package before the April 22
international climate summit hosted by Biden. The second part
could be timed to coincide with the summit on financing African economies that
French President Emmanuel Macron will convene in Paris on May 18.
Rich countries therefore have an opportunity to provide developing
economies with extra resources for both short-term vaccine procurement and
long-term recovery. Financing could come from new allocations of special
drawing rights (the International Monetary Fund’s reserve asset) or the quick
use of special instruments like vaccine bonds issued by the International Finance
Facility for Immunization. Above all, developed countries must ensure that
COVID-19 vaccines are widely available – and continuously adapted to new
coronavirus variants – with no delay for the Global South.
Exceptional dangers call for exceptional measures. With vaccine tensions
and the ongoing economic crisis threatening to undermine international efforts
to save the planet, a global North-South solidarity package represents the best
way forward.
Writing for PS since 2021
1 Commentary
Justin Vaïsse is Founder and Director-General of the Paris Peace Forum, the
fourth edition of which will take place November 11-13, 2021.
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