logo
BRICS' climate leadership aims hang on healing deep divides

BRICS' climate leadership aims hang on healing deep divides

Japan Times10-03-2025
LONDON –
Ambitions by the BRICS group to take on a greater climate leadership role, building on the success of last month's United Nations nature talks, depend on the countries overcoming fractious politics and entrenched disagreements over money.
As the United States has withdrawn from global efforts to combat climate change and, more generally, shifted its focus to promoting domestic interests, the countries known collectively as BRICS — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — are well-placed to influence the outcomes of high-profile meetings this year.
They established their credentials by proposing a draft text that ensured agreement at the COP16 talks in February in Rome, a dozen sources said, potentially unlocking billions of dollars to help halt the destruction of ecosystems.
"Now BRICS has been able to come together in this fashion, (it) will influence our discussions in other platforms going forward," Narend Singh, South Africa's deputy minister of forestry, fisheries and the environment, said.
South Africa is boosting its profile as holder of the Group of 20 presidency this year, while another BRICS member, Brazil, prepares to host COP30 climate talks in November.
"BRICS can fill a space that needs to be filled at this moment in the multilateral negotiations," Brazil's chief negotiator at COP16, Maria Angelica Ikeda, said.
Colombia's Susana Muhamad, president of the COP16 nature talks, said the BRICS countries were positioning to be "bridge builders."
"They are trying to create this balance to represent the Global South in front of the far-right governments that are emerging in the U.S., Italy and Argentina," she said.
"I understand there's a lot of countries wanting to join BRICS, because it's a way, if you have to confront something like the U.S., you are not alone."
A British official present at the talks, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said other countries needed to consider what the BRICS' more muscular approach meant for global institutions.
Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva attends the first meeting of BRICS Sherpas, or chief negotiators, at the Itamaraty Palace, in Brasilia, Brazil, on Feb. 26.
|
REUTERS
But if BRICS' is to help fill the vacuum left by the United States under President Donald Trump, it has to address internal divisions over politics and finance.
The group's refusal to assume the official financial obligations of donor countries could prove a stumbling block, Timo Leiter, a distinguished policy fellow at the London School of Economics, said.
So far the middle-income BRICS have resisted demands from cash-strapped developed countries that they should share financial liability, complicating the quest for compromise at U.N. negotiations on climate funding and upcoming talks on development finance in Seville, Spain.
Of the $25.8 billion in biodiversity-related financing in 2022, nearly three-quarters came from five sources: European Union institutions, France, Germany, Japan and the United States, data from the OECD showed.
Diverging national interests among the BRICS, with Russia keen to maintain its sale of fossil fuels, while Brazil presses countries to decarbonize faster at COP30, may also prove sticking points.
"They (the BRICS) are drastically different in terms of development stage and emissions trajectory," said Li Shuo, director of China Climate at Asia Society.
"What ties them together is the geopolitical aspiration which leads to the question of can they agree to put forward an affirmative agenda."
A test of the group's solidarity could be at a meeting in Bonn in June where countries begin to set out their COP30 negotiating positions, analysts said.
The Financing for Development conference in Seville in June could also prove pivotal, with ministers set to discuss global sustainability goals and ongoing reform of the international financial system.
"This will be the perfect entry point for BRICS to advance their aim of changing the global order and having a stronger say in the global financial system," Leiter said. "The new U.S. position is almost a gift."
Shorter-term, the BRICS are likely to renew demands for more say in the running of the Global Environment Facility (GEF), which disburses much of the world's biodiversity finance.
GEF reform is a focus as richer countries cut development spending while demanding nature-rich countries do more to protect ecosystems such as the Amazon.
"It's a problem that instead of having more money directed to nature and to biodiversity, we have countries updating their nuclear weapons, or buying more armaments," said Brazil's Ikeda.
"At the same time, they're demanding from us, the mega-diverse countries more and more obligations."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan to consider role in security guarantees provided to Ukraine: Ishiba
Japan to consider role in security guarantees provided to Ukraine: Ishiba

Japan Today

time13 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Japan to consider role in security guarantees provided to Ukraine: Ishiba

President Donald Trump speaks as France's President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Finland's President Alexander Stubb, foreground right, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, foreground left, and from background right, U.S. Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles listen during a meeting with European leaders in the East Room of the White House on Monday. Japan will consider what role it will play in providing security guarantees to Ukraine by assessing its legal and capability constraints, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Tuesday, as U.S.-led talks to end Russia's war on its neighbor continue. Ishiba made the remark after NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte told a U.S. television network that Japan is among some 30 nations that have been collaborating on ways to potentially provide security guarantees to Ukraine to deter any future Russian aggression. "We will play our role appropriately by considering what we can and should do within our legal framework and capabilities," Ishiba told reporters at his office. "At this point, we cannot say specifically what we are going to do." Japan's war-renouncing Constitution only permits the use of force for its own self-defense, putting restrictions on what the country can do overseas. Its Self-Defense Forces have engaged in peacekeeping and anti-piracy missions abroad. Ishiba praised U.S. President Donald Trump's efforts to bring peace to Ukraine by holding talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as well as European leaders who threw support behind him on Monday. Trump wants to have a three-way meeting with Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin. "What is important is to achieve an early cease-fire and a just peace," Ishiba said, underscoring the need to stop innocent Ukrainian and Russian people from falling victim to the war. © KYODO

The Ukrainian Children Killed in Russian Strikes This Year
The Ukrainian Children Killed in Russian Strikes This Year

Yomiuri Shimbun

time17 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

The Ukrainian Children Killed in Russian Strikes This Year

Russia continues to relentlessly bombard Ukraine each day, killing and wounding civilians. July was the deadliest month in Ukraine since the full-scale invasion began in 2022, with 286 people killed and 1,388 wounded, according to the United Nations. The number of civilians killed and wounded in Ukraine in the first seven months of the year increased by 48 percent compared with the same period the year before. On Friday, President Donald Trump hosted Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska for direct talks, but the summit yielded no breakthrough or any sign that the attacks on Ukraine will end. Trump dropped his insistence on a ceasefire and Putin demanded territorial concessions that are unacceptable to Ukraine, according to officials familiar with the talks who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomacy. – – – Nikita Solonichenko, 17 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 Ukraine has long agreed to a 30-day ceasefire to set the stage for negotiations to end the war. Russia has refused. Instead, it has ramped up attacks on heavily populated areas, according to independent military analysts and a Washington Post analysis of data from the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Russia says it targets military facilities and personnel as well as public infrastructure that it says aids the Ukrainian military. – – – Radislav Yatsko, 7 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 At least 55 children have been killed in Ukraine this year, according to the U.N. The Washington Post confirmed that at least 43 of those children were killed in Russian attacks on Ukrainian-controlled territory. Post reporters verified these 43 deaths with parents, relatives, teachers and local officials, and visited the families and graves of more than 20 of them. These are some of their stories. – – – Sofia Yavorska, 9 Killed by a Russian missile in Poltava on Feb. 1 Yehor Yavorskyi, 62, loved everything about his 9-year-old granddaughter: the way she studied the encyclopedia and played tennis, how she danced and drew, the way she made candles and figurines, and even bracelets that she sold in the park to raise money for soldiers like her dad. Yehor also loved how she used to tease him by pulling at his big gray beard and begging him to shave, insisting, 'I want to see my grandfather be young!' On Feb. 1, Sofia's grandmother, Olena Yavorska, 59, felt an explosion as she arrived to work at a shop in Poltava. When her son, his wife and Sofia didn't answer her calls, she rushed to their apartment screaming for someone to save her family. A rescue worker pulled her aside and asked her which part of the building they lived in. 'The first entrance,' she recalled replying. 'Grandma,' he told her, 'the first part is gone.' The Russian cruise missile had destroyed Sofia's apartment, killing the 9-year-old and her parents. To honor Sofia's wishes, Yehor shaved his beard for the family funeral. – – – Maksym and Tymofii Kotov, 11 and 13 Killed by Russian shelling in the Donetsk region on March 11 – – – Unnamed girl, 15 Killed by Russian shelling in Pokrovsk on March 17. Her family has not released her name. – – – Uliana-Khrystyna Malenko, 17 Killed by a Russian drone in Zaporizhzhia on March 21 – – – Valeria Podlipska, 3 Killed by a Russian drone in Kyiv on March 23 – – – Unnamed boy, 10 Killed by a Russian glide bomb in Kramatorsk on July 22 – – – Diana and Daniil Zapishnyi, 12 and 7 Killed by a Russian missile in Poltava on Feb. 1 After a Russian missile killed Daniil Zapishnyi, 7; his older sister Diana, 12; and their parents, it was up to Daniil's teacher to explain to his friends why he was no longer at school. Bohdana Drok had not trained for this moment – but she did her best to explain the war and why the boy who could never sit still unless food was on the table would not be coming back to class. For weeks after, her 7-year-old students would collapse in her arms to cry. Now, when air-raid sirens go off, she notices the children are much quicker to rush to the basement shelter. Teachers wanted to hang portraits of the siblings in a memorial. But they worried placing the photos in the hallway would be too upsetting for the children still processing the deaths. Instead, their images now hang on a wall in the principal's office. Students can come to visit privately when they need a moment with one of their lost friends. 'No goal can be justified if the price is the life of a human child,' Drok said. – – – Mykyta Perekhrest, 15 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 – – – Kostiantyn Novik, 16 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 – – – Nicole Haranska, 5 Killed by a Russian drone in Kyiv on March 23 Oleksandr Haranskyi, his wife, Oleksandra, and their daughter Nicole moved to Kyiv believing it would be safer than their home village of Orikhiv, near the front line in the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region. They desperately missed home: their 300 beehives, their successful honey business, their church. The couple had met through their evangelical faith and stayed busy in Kyiv with their new Christian community. Seeking privacy from the shared apartment where they lived, the family often slept in a mobile home on the church property. On March 23, they were all asleep there in the same bed when a swarm of drones struck. Oleksandra was pulled out of the rubble alive. Oleksandr and Nicole were killed. Nicole loved rainbows, art classes and church. She spoke about heaven more than most children her age. 'Mom, when are we going to run around on clouds with Jesus?' Oleksandra recalled her daughter saying. 'She believed in it fully.' Despite everything the attack took from her, Oleksandra said she has forgiven the Russian soldiers who launched the drone and killed her husband and child. 'When you say 'I forgive,' you liberate yourself,' she said. 'But I will not forget.' – – – Arina Samodina, 7 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 – – – Oleh Kaliusenko, 17 Killed by a Russian missile in Sumy on April 13 – – – Veronika Kariachka, 17 Killed by a Russian drone in Dnipro on April 16 – – – Polina Osaulenko, 9 Killed by a Russian glide bomb in the Zaporizhzhia region on May 31 – – – Kirill Golovko, 12 Killed by a Russian drone in Sumy region on Aug. 2 – – – Danylo Nikitskyi, 15 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 The teenagers' parents were supposed to meet soon for a barbecue: a big step in their children's new relationship that started in January and had quickly turned serious. Instead they met for the first time over their children's dead bodies, laid out in the park. The 15-year-olds' hands were intertwined. Danylo Nikitskyi and Alina Kutsenko had fallen hard for each other with the typical intensity of first love. They were growing up fast: Danylo was no longer the little boy obsessed with learning magic tricks; Alina was no longer the little girl who dyed her hair bright pink in second grade. Even at 15, they were already planning their future, hoping to attend law school together in Odesa. 'It was such a young love. A first love. And if they would have little misunderstandings it would upset them both endlessly,' Alina's mother, Marta Kutsenko said. The parents decided to bury the children together and are now designing a shared memorial plaque. Danylo's father said his favorite memory of his son, 'was everything between the 18th of November 2009 until the day of his death.' – – – Alina Kutsenko, 15 Danylo's girlfriend, killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 – – – Tymofii Tsvitok, 3 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 – – – Herman Tripolets, 9 Killed by a Russian missile in Kryvyi Rih on April 4 From Svitlana Tripolets's apartment window, she looks down each day on the playground where her son, Herman, 9, was killed on April 4. Just after the explosion sent a shock wave through their building, Herman's father and sister rushed downstairs to find him. He was on the merry-go-round, dead. The family chose to cremate him, because Svitlana feared that if she knew his body was intact underground, she would just want to dig him out. They do not plan to change apartments, because no matter where they go, Svitlana said, the grief will always follow. Instead, they look out at the playground and remember Herman, who loved Legos, swimming and karate. 'He never had temper tantrums,' Svitlana said, 'and he said, 'I love my life.'' – – – Viktoriia Kamienkova, 13 Killed by a Russian rocket in the Donetsk region on April 24 – – – Danylo Khudia, 17 Killed by a Russian missile in Kyiv on April 24 – – – Valeriia Khlibets, 15 Killed by a Russian drone in Pavlohrad on April 24 – – – Dmytro, 14 months Killed by a Russian drone near Kherson on July 9 – – – Matvii Marchenko, 6 Killed in a Russian ballistic missile strike on an apartment building in Kyiv on July 31 – – – Alina and Anastasia Gumeniuk, 10 and 13 Killed in a Russian ballistic missile strike on an apartment building in Kyiv on July 31 – – – Maksym Martynenko, 11 Killed by a Russian missile in Sumy on April 13 Maksym Martynenko, 11, was born into a family of evangelical Christians, but often resisted going with them to church. On Palm Sunday, he joined his parents for the first time in a while. As they rode the bus to church, Russia launched two ballistic missiles into Sumy's city center, killing 35 people, including Maksym and his parents. Maksym's leg was blown off, and his neighbor Valeria Peredrienko recalled how, when she saw him before his burial, the rest of his body was intact. It was almost, she said, 'as if he was about to get up and run to play.' Maksym left behind his faithful dog Rex and his grandmother, Nadiia Krasnoshchok, 69, who said she was so sedated in the days after their deaths that she is only now 'slowly coming to understand' that her only relatives are gone. 'I would smash Putin's face in myself,' she said. The family was buried together. Near their shared grave, someone placed a soccer ball – the same one Maksym used to kick. – – – Margarita Titarenko, 12 Killed by a Russian drone in the Dnipropetrovsk region on April 29 – – – Borys Zinchenko, 6 Killed by a Russian missile in the Sumy region on May 6 – – – Oleksandr Kapitan, 15 Killed by a Russian glide bomb in Kherson on April 18 Oleksandr Kapitan was born on July 25, 2009, a month sooner than expected, with all the risks that entails. For his parents, the boy, nicknamed Sasha, was a child of hope: Their first child, born a year earlier, lived only seven days. 'When I was allowed to hold him for the first time, I was very happy,' his father, Oleksandr Sobchuk, recalled. 'We were all very happy.' Sasha grew up bursting with life. He played soccer, built construction sets, repaired bicycles and made pizza with his mother, before she died from a heart attack last year. His family survived Russian occupation in their home village of Muzykivka, in the Kherson region, in 2022. When Ukrainian soldiers retook the area nine months later, Sasha rushed in excitement to greet them. He later befriended the Ukrainian troops stationed near his home, who several months ago gifted him with a marine's beret, a military jacket and several patches. He dreamed of one day joining them in the military. Then, on April 17, Sasha and Oleksandr were at a service station when Russian jets dropped glide bombs on Kherson, sending shrapnel into Sasha's head. Oleksandr used a rag to try to stop his son's bleeding. He called for help, but Russian drones prevented any ambulance from reaching them, so he rushed Sasha to the hospital himself. Doctors performed two long surgeries, and when Oleksandr was allowed into his son's room the next day, Sasha was breathing. His eyes were slightly open. 'I really wanted him to get out of there, to fight for himself – he was a strong boy,' Oleksandr said. 'But the shrapnel was stronger.' At home in Sasha's room, everything remains in its place. A phone from his sister. The uniform gifted by soldiers. His notebooks, backpack and construction sets. From his window, Oleksandr looks out at the cemetery where Sasha is buried and sees his son's tombstone, marked by a large Ukrainian flag to match the graves of fallen soldiers. – – – Mykhailo Shyhyda, 1 Killed by a Russian drone in the Chernihiv region on June 5 – – – Bohdan Hareta, 17 Killed in a June 3 Russian rocket strike in Sumy; died in a hospital on June 10. – – – Maria Siora, 11 Killed in a Russian missile strike on Kyiv on June 23 – – – Dmytro Bezverkhyi, 5 Killed in a Russian drone strike in Sumy on June 24 – – – Lev Lamekhov, 2 Killed in a Russian ballistic missile strike on an apartment building in Kyiv on July 31 – – – Roman Hayovyi, 17 Killed in a Russian ballistic missile strike on an apartment building in Kyiv on July 31 – – – Roman, Tamara and Stanislav Martyniuk, 17, 12 and 8 Killed by a Russian missile in the Zhytomyr region on May 25 The hour before his siblings' funeral began, Oleksandr Martyniuk, 24, was digging through what remained of his family home – searching for anything he could salvage. Across the way, a small pile was forming: a stack of dinner plates, a heap of toys, a red rug, rolled up tight. Then he found the chickens. For three days, they had been trapped without food or water under the rubble – the same rubble that had crushed his two younger brothers and sister days before. Oleksandr gently picked each bird up – some injured, some still far from full-grown – and moved them to safety in the trunk of a half-blown-up car. They clucked as his girlfriend quietly fed them grain out of her hand. Oleksandr was in Kyiv when the call came about the first Russian attack on his quiet hometown. A missile had plunged straight into his family's home. Staying busy was how Oleksandr was coping with this new world, the one where his childhood home no longer existed, his parents were wounded, and three of his four siblings were dead. Dusk was settling in. He quickly changed his clothes, showered and rushed to the church, where hundreds of mourners came to pay their respects. His mother was too unwell to attend her three children's funeral. Instead, it was Oleksandr who stood by his father, clutching his shoulders as hundreds of people lined up to pay their respects to the three coffins in the tiny church. Two were for Tamara and Stanislav, the youngest children, who had been studying traditional Ukrainian music at a nearby school. And one was for Roman, who was due to finish high school in weeks. That night, a teacher laid his graduation sash across his coffin.

Recognition of Palestine: Move Is Grave Warning Against Israel's Inhumane Acts
Recognition of Palestine: Move Is Grave Warning Against Israel's Inhumane Acts

Yomiuri Shimbun

timea day ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Recognition of Palestine: Move Is Grave Warning Against Israel's Inhumane Acts

France has announced that it will recognize Palestine as a state as early as September, and more countries are gradually moving toward aligning themselves with this decision. This is quite simply a warning against Israel's invasion of the Palestinian territory of Gaza and the worsening of the humanitarian situation there. France's announcement should not merely be a political declaration, but rather serve as an opportunity to strengthen international pressure on Israel. French President Emmanuel Macron explained that the recognition of Palestine as a state is aimed at stopping the war in Gaza and strongly urging Israel to resume humanitarian aid. Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have also announced similar moves. Palestine has already been recognized as a state by more than 140 countries and has obtained the status of observer state at the United Nations. However, this is the first time that Britain, France and Canada, which are members of the Group of Seven advanced nations, have moved toward recognizing Palestine. Since the Israeli military invaded Gaza in October 2023, it has continued attacks that go beyond the scope of self-defense, resulting in more than 60,000 deaths. It has blocked humanitarian aid from the United Nations and is shooting residents who gather at distribution points in search of food. Britain and France, along with other countries, must have concluded that this situation cannot be ignored and that a more powerful message must be issued. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu must accept the weight of this message and stop indiscriminate attacks in Gaza and fully resume U.N. aid activities. The Israeli and Palestinian sides reached mutual recognition of each other in the 1993 Oslo Accord and mapped out a course toward a two-state solution in which the two sides coexist peacefully as independent countries. However, differences remain unresolved over issues such as the boundary demarcation and how to define the status of Jerusalem, which is a holy site for Islam, Judaism and Christianity, leaving talks toward achieving solutions stalled for more than 10 years. Israel is accelerating moves that contradict the two-state solution. It has expanded military operations, claiming to take control of the entire Gaza Strip. And in the Palestinian territory of the West Bank, Israel is condoning criminal acts by Jewish settlers who are taking land from Palestinians. Israel's actions are utterly inhumane, but simply recognizing Palestine as a state will not stop them. Japan has been cautious about recognizing Palestine out of consideration for the United States, which supports Israel. However, that does not mean it is acceptable to merely observe the situation. Britain imposes sanctions on far-right Israeli ministers. There must be some options for Japan as well, such as implementing sanctions and suspending ministerial visits. The government needs to advance cooperation with Britain and France, among other countries, to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza. (From The Yomiuri Shimbun, Aug. 18, 2025)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store