International Environmental Conventions — UPSC Notes

International Environmental Conventions | UNFCCC | Paris Agreement | COP28 COP29 COP30 | Kyoto | UPSC | Legacy IAS
UPSC Prelims + Mains · Environment · International Relations · Current Affairs 2023–2025

International Environmental Conventions — Part I 🌍

Stockholm 1972 · UNEP · GEF · Earth Summit 1992 · Agenda 21 · SDGs · UNFCCC · COP Timeline (COP1–COP30 Belém 2025) · Kyoto Protocol · CBDR · CDM/JI/Carbon Trading · Paris Agreement · Loss & Damage Fund · COP28 Fossil Fuel Transition · COP29 NCQG $300 Bn · COP30 Global Implementation Accelerator

$300 Bn/yr
Climate finance to developing nations by 2035 — NCQG agreed at COP29 Baku 2024
$1.3 Tn/yr
Aspirational climate finance goal by 2035 from all sources (Baku-to-Belém Roadmap)
COP30
Belém, Brazil — Nov 10–22, 2025 · First Amazon COP · Belém Mission to 1.5°C
First Ever
COP28 Dubai 2023: First agreement to “transition away from fossil fuels” in 28 years of climate talks
Article 6
Global carbon markets fully operationalised at COP29 after years of failed negotiations
1

Stockholm Conference 1972 — Where It All Began

The world’s first global conference on the environment — the starting gun for all international environmental law

💡 Think of Stockholm as Environmental Law’s “Big Bang”

Before 1972, there was no international framework for environmental protection. Countries could pollute freely with no international accountability. The United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (UNCHE) — held in Stockholm, Sweden in June 1972 — changed this permanently. It was the moment the international community recognised that environment is a global commons requiring global governance. Every major environmental treaty you’ll study — UNFCCC, CBD, UNCCD, Basel — traces its intellectual lineage to Stockholm 1972.

Stockholm Conference 1972 — Key Facts
  • Full name: United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (UNCHE)
  • When/Where: June 5–16, 1972 | Stockholm, Sweden
  • Why June 5?World Environment Day is observed every year on June 5 to commemorate the opening of the Stockholm Conference
  • Key outputs:
    • Stockholm Declaration — 26 principles establishing the framework for international environmental law. Principle 1: “Man has the fundamental right to freedom, equality and adequate conditions of life, in an environment of quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being.”
    • Action Plan for the Human Environment — 109 recommendations for international environmental action
    • Creation of UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) — the world’s first UN body dedicated to the environment
  • Key concept introduced: “Only One Earth” — the idea that Earth’s resources are finite and shared by all of humanity. Sovereignty over resources comes with responsibility not to harm others’ environments.
  • India’s role: PM Indira Gandhi was one of the few heads of government who attended Stockholm — her speech on poverty as the greatest polluter was historically significant. She argued that environmental issues in developing countries stemmed from poverty, not industrialisation.
2

UNEP, GEF & Key Agencies

The institutional architecture of global environmental governance
UNEP — United Nations Environment Programme
  • Established: 1972 (post-Stockholm Conference)
  • Headquarters: Nairobi, Kenya (only major UN body HQ’d in a developing country)
  • Status: Not a specialised agency (like WHO or FAO) — a Programme under the UN General Assembly. This limits its funding and authority — a frequent UPSC trap.
  • Key functions: Monitors global environmental conditions | Facilitates development of international environmental law | Supports countries with capacity building | Administers key environmental conventions (Basel, Rotterdam, Stockholm POPs)
  • Key publications: Global Environment Outlook (GEO) | Emissions Gap Report (annual) | Adaptation Gap Report | Frontiers Report
  • Major agencies under UNEP umbrella:
    • IPCC: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (joint UNEP + WMO, 1988)
    • IUCN: International Union for Conservation of Nature
    • GEF: Global Environment Facility
    • Ozone Secretariat (for Montreal Protocol)
    • Basel, Rotterdam, Stockholm Conventions Secretariat
GEF — Global Environment Facility
  • Established: 1992 (at the Earth Summit, Rio) | Became permanent in 1994
  • What it does: Provides grants and financing to developing countries for projects that benefit the global environment — climate change, biodiversity, land degradation, chemicals and waste, international waters
  • Financial mechanism for: UNFCCC | CBD | UNCCD | Stockholm Convention (POPs) | Minamata Convention (Mercury)
  • Structure: Not a UN agency — a partnership between 184 countries, international institutions, NGOs. Administered by World Bank as Trustee.
  • GEF 8 (2022-2026): Replenishment of USD 5.33 billion — largest replenishment in GEF history
  • India and GEF: India is a major recipient of GEF funding for biodiversity, climate, and land degradation projects
  • Multilateral Fund (MLF): Separate fund specifically for Montreal Protocol — helps developing countries phase out ozone-depleting substances. Established 1991 under Article 10 of Montreal Protocol. HQ: Montreal, Canada.
3

Earth Summit 1992 (UNCED) & Post-Rio Framework

Rio de Janeiro, June 1992 — The mother of all environmental summits
Earth Summit 1992 — UNCED (United Nations Conference on Environment and Development)
  • When/Where: June 3–14, 1992 | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • Theme: Sustainable Development — the first time environment and development were explicitly linked at the highest international level
  • Key outputs — “Rio Products”:
    • Rio Declaration on Environment and Development — 27 principles of sustainable development. Includes the Precautionary Principle (Principle 15) and Polluter Pays Principle (Principle 16)
    • Agenda 21 — a comprehensive, non-binding action plan for sustainable development (2,500 pages). Blueprint for the 21st century.
    • UNFCCC — United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (opened for signature at Rio)
    • CBD — Convention on Biological Diversity (opened for signature at Rio)
    • UNCCD — framework for desertification convention (formally adopted 1994)
    • GEF — Global Environment Facility formally established
    • Forest Principles — non-binding statement on sustainable management of forests
  • Scale: Largest summit in history at the time — 172 governments, 108 Heads of State/Government, 2,400 NGOs, 17,000 civil society participants
  • Key concepts introduced: Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) | Intergenerational equity | Right to development + environment together
Rio+20 (2012) & Post-2015 Framework
Rio+20 and the SDG Process
  • Rio+20 (2012): United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD) — 20 years after Rio. Theme: “The Future We Want.” Produced the green economy framework and launched the process to develop the SDGs.
  • High-Level Political Forum (HLPF): Created at Rio+20 to replace the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) as the main UN platform for follow-up and review of SDGs. Meets annually under ECOSOC; every 4 years under UNGA (Sustainable Development Summit).
  • Agenda 2030 (September 2015): “Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development” — adopted at UN Sustainable Development Summit, New York, September 25–27, 2015. Contains the 17 SDGs with 169 targets.
4

SDGs — Sustainable Development Goals (2015–2030)

17 Goals · 169 Targets · Replaced MDGs · “Leave No One Behind” — Universal, Integrated, Transformative
SDGs vs MDGs — Key Differences (UPSC Frequently Tests This)
  • MDGs (2000–2015): 8 goals | For developing countries only | Set by experts, not through broad consultation | Focused on poverty, health, education (social aspects) | No environmental sustainability goal
  • SDGs (2015–2030): 17 goals, 169 targets | Universal (apply to ALL countries including developed) | Developed through broadest consultation in UN history (7 million people) | Integrate social, economic, AND environmental dimensions | Adopted September 25, 2015 at UNGA
  • Key environmental SDGs:
    • SDG 13: Climate Action | SDG 14: Life Below Water | SDG 15: Life on Land
    • SDG 6: Clean Water | SDG 7: Affordable and Clean Energy | SDG 11: Sustainable Cities | SDG 12: Responsible Consumption
  • CBDR in SDGs: While universal, SDGs recognise “common but differentiated responsibilities” — rich countries must do more and support poorer ones
  • SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals — the means of implementation. Finance, technology transfer, capacity building, trade. Global Partnership for Sustainable Development.
  • 2023 SDG Summit: UN SDG Summit (September 2023, New York) found the world is “off track” — only ~15% of SDG targets on track globally. Adopted “SDG Summit Political Declaration” calling for urgent acceleration.
5

UNFCCC — The Climate Change Convention

The parent framework for all climate negotiations — mother of Kyoto Protocol and Paris Agreement

💡 UNFCCC is the Club, Paris Agreement is the Latest Club Rules

Think of the UNFCCC as a club that all countries joined in 1992. The club’s original membership agreement said: “We agree climate change is a problem and humans cause it.” But the club’s rules (protocols and agreements) have been negotiated separately: first the Kyoto Protocol (1997) — strict rules for rich countries only — then the Paris Agreement (2015) — flexible rules for everyone. The annual Conference of the Parties (COP) is the club’s annual general meeting where rules are updated, progress is reviewed, and new decisions are made.

UNFCCC — Key Facts
  • Full name: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
  • Opened for signature: June 1992 (Rio Earth Summit)
  • Entered into force: March 21, 1994
  • Parties: 198 parties (nearly universal membership — almost every country in the world)
  • Secretariat: Bonn, Germany
  • Objective: “Stabilisation of GHG concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system”
  • Key principle: Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) — all countries have responsibility, but developed countries bear greater historical responsibility and must lead
  • COP: Annual supreme decision-making body. Each COP produces binding decisions under the Convention.
  • Key subsidiary bodies:
    • SBSTA: Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice
    • SBI: Subsidiary Body for Implementation
  • Criticisms: Slow consensus-based process | No enforcement mechanism | Voluntary nature of commitments | Rich-poor divide on historical responsibility | US withdrawal and rejoining | Fossil fuel industry lobby influence on COP negotiations
6

COP Timeline — From Berlin 1995 to Belém 2025

Know the landmark COPs for UPSC — every 3–4 years a transformative COP reshapes climate diplomacy
COP 1
1995

Berlin, Germany — Berlin Mandate

First COP. Agreed that Annex I (developed) countries must take binding emission targets. Initiated process to negotiate what became the Kyoto Protocol.

COP 3
1997

Kyoto, Japan — Kyoto Protocol 🌟

Landmark. Adopted the Kyoto Protocol — first legally binding emission reduction targets for developed (Annex I) countries. 5% average reduction below 1990 levels by 2008–2012. US refused to ratify.

COP 7
2001

Marrakech, Morocco — Marrakech Accords

Finalised operational rules for Kyoto Protocol’s flexible mechanisms (CDM, JI, Emissions Trading). Critical for making Kyoto work in practice.

COP 13
2007

Bali, Indonesia — Bali Action Plan

Launched formal negotiations toward a post-Kyoto framework. Bali Roadmap included a “shared vision” for long-term cooperative action on mitigation, adaptation, finance, and technology.

COP 15
2009

Copenhagen, Denmark — Copenhagen Accord

High hopes, modest outcome. Developed countries promised $100 billion/year by 2020 for developing nations — a goal that remained contentious for 15 years. No binding agreement achieved. Disappointed many.

COP 17
2011

Durban, South Africa — Durban Platform

Agreed to negotiate a new universal legal agreement applicable to all parties — which became the Paris Agreement. Also agreed a second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol (2013–2020).

COP 18
2012

Doha, Qatar — Doha Amendment

Adopted Doha Amendment to Kyoto Protocol — extended Kyoto’s second commitment period to 2020. Also advanced Green Climate Fund and loss and damage discussions.

COP 21
2015

Paris, France — Paris Agreement 🌟

Historic. First universal, legally binding climate agreement applying to ALL countries (196 parties). 1.5°C/2°C temperature limits. NDCs — nationally determined contributions. Ratchet mechanism. India’s target: 45% emission intensity by 2030, 500 GW non-fossil by 2030, Net Zero by 2070.

COP 26
2021

Glasgow, UK — Glasgow Climate Pact

First explicit mention of “phase-down of unabated coal.” India’s “panchamrit” targets announced. Article 6 (carbon markets) rules agreed. $100 billion goal acknowledged as still unmet. Called on countries to revisit 2030 targets.

COP 27
2022

Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt — Loss & Damage Fund 🌟

Landmark: agreed to establish a new Fund for Loss and Damage — compensation for climate-related losses in vulnerable countries. First time in 30 years this was formally agreed. Operationalised at COP28.

COP 28
2023

Dubai, UAE — First Global Stocktake & Fossil Fuel Transition 🌟 Major

First-ever “global stocktake” of Paris Agreement progress. Historic: first agreement in 28 years of climate talks to “transition away from fossil fuels.” Called for tripling renewables and doubling energy efficiency by 2030. Loss & Damage Fund operationalised ($600+ million pledged). Loss & Damage Fund operationalised under World Bank as interim host.

COP 29
2024

Baku, Azerbaijan — NCQG: $300 Bn Finance Goal 🌟 Latest

The “Climate Finance COP.” Agreed NCQG: $300 billion/year to developing nations by 2035. Wider aspiration: $1.3 trillion/year from all sources. Article 6 carbon markets fully operationalised. “Baku to Belém Roadmap” to reach $1.3T. India criticised deal as “paltry.”

COP 30
2025

Belém, Brazil — First Amazon COP Latest

First COP held in Amazon rainforest region. Launched Global Implementation Accelerator and Belém Mission to 1.5°C. Reaffirmed $1.3 Tn climate finance goal. Tripled adaptation finance by 2035. No explicit fossil fuel phase-out text (blocked by petrostates — only reference to COP28 “UAE Consensus”). 122 countries submitted new NDCs covering ~80% of global emissions. Fire disrupted venue during negotiations.

7

Kyoto Protocol (1997) — The First Binding Climate Treaty

COP3 Kyoto, Japan · Entered into force 2005 · Only Annex I countries had binding targets
Kyoto Protocol — Essential Facts for UPSC
  • Adopted: December 1997 at COP3, Kyoto, Japan
  • Entered into force: February 16, 2005 (required 55 countries covering 55% of emissions to ratify)
  • First commitment period: 2008–2012 | Target: Annex I countries reduce GHG emissions average 5.2% below 1990 levels
  • Second commitment period (Doha Amendment, 2012): 2013–2020 | 18% below 1990 levels. Only EU, Australia, Norway and some others participated — USA, Canada, Russia, Japan withdrew.
  • US position: The US signed Kyoto but the Senate refused to ratify (97–0 vote). President Bush formally withdrew in 2001.
  • India’s position: India is a signatory to Kyoto. As a non-Annex I developing country, India had NO binding emission targets under Kyoto — consistent with CBDR principle.
  • Six GHGs covered: CO₂ | CH₄ (methane) | N₂O (nitrous oxide) | HFCs | PFCs | SF₆
CBDR — Common But Differentiated Responsibilities
CBDR — The Most Important Principle in Climate Negotiations
  • Origin: Rio Declaration 1992, Principle 7 — first formally established. Embedded in UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol.
  • Meaning: All countries share the responsibility to address climate change (common responsibility). BUT developed countries bear greater responsibility because they:
    • Industrialised first → accumulated more historical emissions
    • Have greater financial and technological capacity
    • Caused the majority of current stock of GHGs in atmosphere
  • Practical implication: Under Kyoto, only developed countries had binding targets. Developing countries (including India) had no binding targets. This is India’s principled position in climate negotiations — we didn’t cause the problem, our per capita emissions are low, and we need development space.
  • CBDR + Respective Capabilities (CBDR-RC): The Paris Agreement updated this to “common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances” — acknowledging that some large developing countries (China, India) have grown significantly since Kyoto.
Kyoto’s Three Annexes — Know This for Prelims
CategoryWho?Commitments Under KyotoKey Examples
Annex IDeveloped + Economies in Transition (EIT)Binding emission reduction targets in Commitment Period 1 (2008-12). Report emissions annually.USA, EU, Canada, Japan, Australia, Russia (EIT), Ukraine (EIT)
Annex IISubset of Annex I — rich developed countries only (NOT EIT countries)All Annex I obligations PLUS must provide financial and technology assistance to developing countriesUSA, EU, Japan, Canada, Australia (NOT Russia, Ukraine)
Non-Annex IDeveloping countriesNO binding emission reduction targets. Can participate in CDM to earn carbon credits. General reporting obligations only.India, China, Brazil, all developing nations
8

Kyoto’s Flexible Market Mechanisms — CDM, JI & Emissions Trading

Market-based tools to achieve emission cuts cost-effectively · India was a major CDM beneficiary

💡 The Carbon Market Analogy — Pollution as Currency

Imagine each country has a “pollution allowance” — a certain number of tonnes of CO₂ they’re permitted to emit. Countries that reduce below their allowance earn “carbon credits” — like bonus coins. Countries that emit above their allowance must buy credits from others. This creates a financial incentive to reduce emissions: cutting pollution becomes profitable. This is the basic logic of carbon markets. CDM, JI, and Emissions Trading are three different versions of this market applied to different situations under the Kyoto Protocol.

Three Flexible Mechanisms — Side by Side
  • 1. Clean Development Mechanism (CDM):
    • Between: Annex I country + Non-Annex I (developing) country
    • Mechanism: Rich country funds a green project (solar, wind, efficiency) in a developing country → developing country earns Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) = carbon credits → credits sold to Annex I country to count toward their Kyoto target
    • Win-win: Rich country meets target cheaply; developing country gets clean technology investment
    • India and CDM: India was one of the top CDM host countries globally — major recipient of CDM investments in renewable energy and industrial efficiency projects. India’s CDM Executive Council registered thousands of projects.
    • Issue: Projects sometimes failed to deliver “additionality” (would have happened anyway without CDM funding)
  • 2. Joint Implementation (JI):
    • Between: Two Annex I countries
    • Mechanism: One Annex I country (usually rich EU country) funds a green project in another Annex I country (usually Eastern European/Russian “Economy in Transition”) → earns Emission Reduction Units (ERUs)
    • Logic: Cheaper to reduce emissions in Russia/Ukraine than in Germany — so Germany pays Russia to clean up, both benefit
  • 3. International Emissions Trading (IET):
    • Between: Two Annex I countries directly trading Assigned Amount Units (AAUs)
    • Mechanism: Country A emits less than target → sells surplus AAUs to Country B which needs more allowance
    • Controversy: “Hot Air” problem — Russia and Ukraine received generous targets based on 1990 (pre-collapse) emissions → had massive surpluses to sell despite doing nothing to reduce emissions → weakened the environmental integrity of the system
COP29 Article 6 — Carbon Markets Finally Operationalised Current Affairs 2024
🔴 Article 6 Paris Agreement — Global Carbon Market Finally Working
  • Paris Agreement Article 6 provides the framework for international carbon market cooperation under the Paris Agreement — replacing Kyoto’s CDM/JI/IET
  • Article 6.2: Bilateral cooperative approaches between countries — countries trade “Internationally Transferred Mitigation Outcomes (ITMOs)” with agreed accounting rules
  • Article 6.4: Centrally governed UN mechanism — a new global crediting mechanism to replace CDM. Allows project-based emission reductions to be credited and traded internationally.
  • COP29 breakthrough: After years of stalled negotiations (Article 6 was left unresolved at COP25, COP26, COP27, COP28), COP29 finally operationalised Article 6 — allowing the new global carbon market to begin implementation. This was one of COP29’s most significant outcomes.
  • India: India has been developing its own carbon credit market — the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) 2023 under the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act 2022. Aims to create a domestic carbon market. India sees carbon markets as a way to attract investment in green transitions.
  • Carbon Tax in India: India has a form of carbon tax through the National Clean Energy and Environment Fund (NCEEF) levy — a cess on coal (₹400/tonne since 2017). Revenue used for clean energy R&D and projects.
9

Paris Agreement (2015) — The New Climate Constitution

COP21 · Replaces Kyoto for all countries · NDCs · Ratchet mechanism · Loss & Damage
Paris Agreement — Complete UPSC Profile
  • Adopted: December 12, 2015 at COP21, Paris, France
  • Entered into force: November 4, 2016 (fastest entry into force for a major multilateral treaty)
  • Parties: 196 parties (near-universal)
  • Temperature goal: Hold warming to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, while pursuing efforts to limit to 1.5°C
  • Key difference from Kyoto: Applies to ALL parties (not just Annex I) | NDCs are nationally determined (not top-down assigned) | Legally binding in structure but NDC targets themselves are not legally binding | Universal, not two-tier
  • NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions): Each country’s self-determined climate pledges, submitted to UNFCCC. Must be updated every 5 years with increased ambition (“ratchet mechanism”). Countries cannot lower their ambition in new NDCs.
  • Global Stocktake: Every 5 years, the world collectively reviews progress toward Paris Agreement goals. First stocktake completed at COP28 Dubai 2023 — found progress insufficient.
  • Finance: Developed countries to mobilise $100 billion/year by 2020 (a pre-Paris goal acknowledged in Paris). New goal (NCQG) to be set by 2025 — agreed at COP29 as $300 Bn/yr.
  • Loss and Damage: Recognition (Article 8) that beyond adaptation, some climate impacts cause irreversible “loss and damage” requiring compensation. Fund established at COP27 (2022), operationalised at COP28 (2023), replenishment confirmed at COP30.
  • India’s NDC (Updated 2022):
    • Reduce emissions intensity by 45% by 2030 (vs 2005)
    • 50% of electricity from non-fossil sources by 2030
    • 500 GW non-fossil installed capacity by 2030
    • Additional carbon sink of 2.5–3 billion tonnes CO₂e by 2030
    • Net Zero by 2070
10

COP28, COP29 & COP30 — Deep Dive Most Current

The three most recent COPs — highest UPSC exam relevance
COP28 — Dubai, UAE (Nov 30 – Dec 13, 2023)
🔴 COP28 Dubai — Key Outcomes
  • Host: UAE | 85,000 participants — largest COP ever | President: Dr. Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber
  • 1st Global Stocktake: Central outcome. First comprehensive assessment of Paris Agreement progress. Finding: the world is NOT on track. Emissions need to fall 43% by 2030 (vs 2019) to limit 1.5°C — not happening.
  • HISTORIC — “Transition away from fossil fuels”: For the first time in 28 years of climate negotiations, parties agreed to “transition away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner.” Not a “phase-out” (developing nations and oil producers opposed) but a landmark nonetheless — the “UAE Consensus.”
  • Renewables tripling: Called for tripling global renewable energy capacity (to 11,000 GW) and doubling energy efficiency improvements by 2030
  • Loss & Damage Fund operationalised: Fund agreed at COP27 became operational at COP28. World Bank as interim host. Initial pledges: USD 600+ million. UAE pledged $100 million, UK $51 million, US $17.5 million.
  • Next steps from COP28: Countries must submit new NDCs with 2035 targets by Feb 2025 (most missed deadline). NDCs must be “economy-wide, cover all gases, aligned with 1.5°C.”
  • COP30 host confirmed: Brazil (Belém) for November 2025
COP29 — Baku, Azerbaijan (Nov 11–24, 2024) Current Affairs
🔴 COP29 Baku — “The Climate Finance COP” — Complete Coverage
  • Host: Azerbaijan | Participants: ~67,000 | President: Mukhtar Babayev
  • Theme: “Climate Finance” — the central issue was the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG)
  • NCQG Agreed — The Headline:
    • Core goal: Developed countries to mobilise at least USD 300 billion per year to developing countries by 2035 (tripling the previous $100 billion goal)
    • Aspirational goal: All actors (public + private) to work together to reach USD 1.3 trillion per year by 2035 from all sources
    • Replaces the $100 billion/year goal agreed at Copenhagen 2009 (which expires 2025)
    • Called “an insurance policy for humanity” by UNFCCC Executive Secretary Simon Stiell
  • Criticism: Developing nations (including India) called $300 billion “paltry” — too little, too late. UNCTAD estimated the real need is $900 billion-$1.46 trillion annually by 2030. India called it “a paltry sum.”
  • Baku to Belém Roadmap: Azerbaijan + Brazil to work through 2025 to present options for reaching $1.3 trillion by COP30
  • Article 6 — Carbon Markets OPERATIONALISED: Major breakthrough. Rules for both Article 6.2 (bilateral trading) and Article 6.4 (central mechanism) finalised — after years of failed negotiations at COP25 through COP28.
  • Voluntary contributions: For first time, wealthy developing countries (China, Gulf states) encouraged to voluntarily contribute to climate finance — addressing the outdated Annex I/non-Annex I division
  • India at COP29: India criticised the $300 billion deal as inadequate. Argued developed countries must take “historical responsibility.” India has argued that without adequate finance, its clean energy transition will be constrained.
COP30 — Belém, Brazil (Nov 10–22, 2025) Latest
🔴 COP30 Belém — “The Amazon COP” — Complete Coverage
  • Host: Brazil (Belém, Pará — on the edge of the Amazon) | First COP in Latin America since COP16 2010
  • Symbolism: First COP held in Amazon rainforest region — deliberate choice by President Lula to highlight deforestation and Nature-Based Solutions. Called “mutirão” (Brazilian term for collective community effort)
  • Key outcomes:
    • Global Implementation Accelerator (GIA): New voluntary mechanism to accelerate implementation of NDCs and national adaptation plans. Links to COP28’s UAE Consensus on fossil fuel transition.
    • Belém Mission to 1.5°C: Initiative to enhance ambition and implementation to keep 1.5°C within reach. Connects to roadmaps on fossil fuels and deforestation that Brazil announced separately.
    • Adaptation finance tripled: Global “mutirão” decision calls on countries to triple adaptation finance by 2035. Developed nations provided only $26 billion in adaptation finance in 2023 vs needed $310 billion/year.
    • Loss & Damage Fund: Operationalisation and replenishment cycles confirmed
    • $1.3 Trillion reaffirmed: Confirmed the COP29 NCQG goal; all actors to work toward $1.3 trillion/year by 2035
    • NDCs: 122 parties submitted new NDCs by end of COP30 covering ~80% of global emissions. Combined effect: ~12% reduction in global emissions by 2035 vs 2019 — far short of needed 60%.
  • Disappointment — No Fossil Fuel Phase-Out: Major disappointment — despite 80+ countries backing explicit fossil fuel roadmap text, petrostates blocked it. Final text only referenced COP28’s “UAE Consensus” on transition away from fossil fuels — no new fossil fuel language.
  • Fire disruption: Fire broke out at the conference venue during a critical phase of negotiations, forcing evacuation of thousands of attendees
  • Brazil’s separate announcements: Brazilian COP30 Presidency separately announced roadmaps on fossil fuel transition and deforestation reversal — outside the formal COP process

⭐ International Conventions Mega Cheat Sheet

  • Stockholm 1972: First global environment conference (UNCHE) | June 5 = World Environment Day | Created UNEP | 26 principles | Indira Gandhi attended (poverty as greatest polluter)
  • UNEP: 1972 | HQ Nairobi, Kenya (only major UN body in developing country) | Programme (not specialised agency) | Publishes Emissions Gap Report, GEO | Administers Basel/Rotterdam/Stockholm/Minamata conventions
  • GEF: 1992 (Rio) | Financing mechanism for UNFCCC, CBD, UNCCD, Stockholm POPs, Minamata | GEF 8 = $5.33 billion (largest ever)
  • MLF: Multilateral Fund | 1991 | Article 10 Montreal Protocol | HQ Montreal | For developing countries to phase out ODS
  • Earth Summit 1992 (Rio): UNCED | June 1992 | Rio Declaration (27 principles, Precautionary + Polluter Pays) | Agenda 21 | UNFCCC + CBD opened for signature | GEF established | CBDR introduced
  • SDGs: 17 goals, 169 targets | Adopted Sept 25, 2015 | Universal (all countries) | Replaced MDGs (8 goals, developing countries only) | SDG 13 Climate, 14 Ocean, 15 Land | 2023 SDG Summit: only 15% on track
  • UNFCCC: Opened June 1992 (Rio) | In force March 1994 | 198 parties | Secretariat Bonn | COP = annual meeting | Objective: stabilise GHG at safe levels | Principle: CBDR
  • Kyoto Protocol: COP3 Kyoto 1997 | In force Feb 16, 2005 | Annex I = binding targets (-5.2% vs 1990, 2008-12) | Non-Annex I (India) = NO binding targets | US never ratified | 6 GHGs covered
  • CBDR: Common But Differentiated Responsibilities | Rio Principle 7 | Developed countries bear greater responsibility (historical emissions + capacity) | India’s core negotiating principle | Updated in Paris to CBDR-RC (Respective Capabilities)
  • Kyoto Annexes: Annex I = developed + EIT (binding targets) | Annex II = rich developed only, NOT EIT (must fund developing countries) | Non-Annex I = developing (no binding targets, can host CDM)
  • CDM: Annex I + Non-Annex I | Developing country hosts green project | Earns CERs (Certified Emission Reductions) | India was major CDM host | Now replaced by Paris Article 6.4
  • JI: Annex I + Annex I | Earns ERUs (Emission Reduction Units) | Mostly EU investing in Eastern Europe/Russia
  • IET: Annex I trades AAUs (Assigned Amount Units) | “Hot Air” problem with Russia/Ukraine
  • Paris Agreement: COP21 Dec 2015 | In force Nov 4, 2016 | 196 parties | Temperature goal: well below 2°C, pursue 1.5°C | NDCs = self-determined, ratchet mechanism | Universal (all countries) | Loss & Damage: Article 8
  • India’s NDC (2022): 45% emission intensity by 2030 (vs 2005) | 50% non-fossil electricity | 500 GW non-fossil capacity | 2.5-3 Bn tonne CO₂ sink | Net Zero 2070
  • COP26 Glasgow 2021: “Phase-down of unabated coal” (first coal mention) | Article 6 rules agreed | India’s Panchamrit targets | $100 Bn goal acknowledged unmet
  • COP27 Sharm 2022: Loss & Damage Fund ESTABLISHED (first time in 30 years)
  • COP28 Dubai 2023: 1st Global Stocktake | “Transition away from fossil fuels” (historic first in 28 years) | Triple renewables + double efficiency by 2030 | Loss & Damage Fund OPERATIONALISED | 85,000 participants
  • COP29 Baku Nov 2024: NCQG: $300 Bn/yr to developing nations by 2035 | Aspirational $1.3 Tn/yr all sources by 2035 | Article 6 carbon markets OPERATIONALISED (after years of failure) | Baku-to-Belém Roadmap | 67,000 participants | India called deal “paltry”
  • COP30 Belém Nov 2025: First Amazon COP | Global Implementation Accelerator | Belém Mission to 1.5°C | Adaptation finance tripled by 2035 | No explicit fossil fuel text (blocked) | 122 countries submitted NDCs | Fire disrupted venue
  • Article 6 (Paris): Article 6.2 = bilateral ITMO trading | Article 6.4 = centrally governed mechanism (replaces CDM) | Both operationalised at COP29
  • India carbon markets: Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) 2023 under Energy Conservation Amendment Act 2022 | Coal cess (₹400/tonne) into National Clean Energy Fund

🧪 Practice MCQs
Current AffairsCOP29 2024
Q1. With reference to the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) agreed at COP29 in Baku (2024), which of the following is CORRECT? 1. It sets a core goal of $300 billion/year from developed countries to developing nations by 2035. 2. It replaces the $200 billion/year goal agreed at Copenhagen in 2009. 3. The aspirational wider goal is $1.3 trillion/year from all sources by 2035. 4. Article 6 carbon markets were fully operationalised for the first time at COP29.
✅ Answer: (d) — 1, 3 and 4 correct. Statement 2 is WRONG.
1 ✅: The NCQG’s core commitment is that developed countries take the lead in mobilising at least $300 billion per year to developing countries by 2035. This triples the previous $100 billion goal. 2 ❌ Wrong (classic UPSC number trap): The Copenhagen Accord (COP15, 2009) established the goal of $100 billion per year (not $200 billion) by 2020 from developed to developing countries. The NCQG at COP29 triples this to $300 billion. This figure — $100 billion — is one of the most tested numbers in UPSC climate questions. It was agreed in 2009, acknowledged repeatedly as unmet, officially reached in 2022, and now replaced by NCQG. 3 ✅: Beyond the core $300 billion goal, the NCQG includes a wider aspirational target of $1.3 trillion per year by 2035 from ALL sources (public + private + multilateral). This creates the “Baku to Belém Roadmap to $1.3T” — a process for Azerbaijan and Brazil (COP29 and COP30 Presidencies) to work through 2025 to develop options for reaching this goal. 4 ✅: COP29 was the breakthrough on Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. Rules for both Article 6.2 (bilateral trading of ITMOs) and Article 6.4 (centrally governed mechanism replacing CDM) were finalised after failing at COP25, COP26, COP27, and COP28. This effectively launches the post-Kyoto global carbon market.
Current AffairsCOP28 2023
Q2. The COP28 Dubai 2023 agreement on the “global stocktake” included which of the following? 1. First-ever agreement to “transition away from fossil fuels” in energy systems. 2. A call to triple renewable energy capacity globally by 2030. 3. Full operationalisation of the Loss and Damage Fund established at COP27. 4. Legally binding emission reduction targets for all Annex I countries by 2025.
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 2 and 3 are correct. Statement 4 is WRONG.
1 ✅: The COP28 global stocktake outcome included the historic first agreement to “transition away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner.” This was the first time in 28 years of climate negotiations (since UNFCCC COP1 in 1995) that fossil fuels were explicitly mentioned in a COP outcome text. Notably, it says “transition away” (not “phase out”) — a compromise to include oil-producing states. 2 ✅: The global stocktake calls on parties to take actions towards achieving at a global scale the “tripling of renewable energy capacity and doubling the rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030.” This means reaching ~11,000 GW of renewable capacity by 2030 (from ~3,400 GW in 2022). 3 ✅: The Loss and Damage Fund — agreed in principle at COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh — was formally operationalised at COP28 Dubai. The World Bank was agreed as interim host. Initial pledges totalled over $600 million (UAE: $100 million, EU: substantial contribution, US: $17.5 million — considered inadequate). 4 ❌ Wrong: The Paris Agreement (which COP28 operates under) does NOT have “legally binding emission reduction targets for specific countries.” This was Kyoto Protocol’s approach — and it failed because large emitters simply withdrew. The Paris Agreement uses NDCs — nationally SELF-DETERMINED contributions — that are binding in their obligation to submit and update, but not binding in their specific numerical targets. COP28 could not and did not create legally binding emission targets.
Practice
Q3. What is the difference between Annex I, Annex II, and Non-Annex I countries under the Kyoto Protocol? Consider: India is a Non-Annex I country. Which statement about India’s Kyoto obligations is CORRECT?
✅ Answer: (c) — India had no binding targets but could host CDM projects
India is a Non-Annex I developing country under the Kyoto Protocol — the CBDR principle explicitly exempted developing nations from binding reduction targets in the first commitment period (2008-12). This was based on the argument that: (1) Developed countries caused the bulk of historical emissions through industrialisation. (2) India’s per-capita emissions are well below global average. (3) India needs development space. (a) Wrong: India had NO binding targets — only Annex I countries had binding targets. (b) Wrong: India is not Annex II (which is a subset of Annex I — the rich developed countries like USA, EU, Japan, who also had to fund developing countries). Russia and Eastern Europe were Annex I but NOT Annex II. (c) ✅ Correct: Non-Annex I countries could participate in the CDM (Clean Development Mechanism) by hosting green projects. A CDM project in India would earn CERs (Certified Emission Reductions) — carbon credits that Annex I countries could buy to meet their Kyoto targets. India was one of the world’s top CDM hosts, with thousands of registered projects in renewable energy, energy efficiency, and industrial gas abatement. The CDM brought significant investment to India. (d) Wrong: The Kyoto Protocol did not mention coal phase-down for any country — the first explicit coal language appeared only at COP26 Glasgow 2021 (“phase-down of unabated coal”). The term “unabated” itself was a compromise — coal with CCS technology is “abated” and thus not covered.
📜 UPSC PYQs — International Conventions
PYQUPSC 2021
With reference to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. It was a legally binding agreement. 2. It set binding limits on greenhouse gas emissions for individual countries. 3. It established a Clean Development Mechanism. Select the correct answer:
✅ Official Answer: (a) 1 only
This is a precision question distinguishing UNFCCC from Kyoto Protocol — a classic UPSC test. 1 ✅: The UNFCCC IS a legally binding international treaty — it was formally ratified by countries and entered into force in 1994. However, its obligations are broadly framed (commitment to stabilise GHG concentrations, submit national reports) rather than specific emission targets. The “legally binding” part is the treaty structure, not the specific targets. 2 ❌ Wrong: The UNFCCC does NOT set binding limits on GHG emissions for individual countries. This is the key distinction — binding country-specific targets were a feature of the Kyoto Protocol (for Annex I countries only). The UNFCCC itself is a framework convention that establishes objectives and principles but leaves the specifics to subsequent protocols. 3 ❌ Wrong: The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) was established under the Kyoto Protocol (Article 12), NOT the UNFCCC itself. The UNFCCC does not mention CDM. Students frequently confuse the parent convention (UNFCCC) with its child protocols (Kyoto, Paris). UNFCCC = framework | Kyoto Protocol (1997) = CDM, JI, IET | Paris Agreement (2015) = NDCs, Article 6, Global Stocktake.
PYQUPSC 2016
The ‘Global Environment Facility’ is associated with which of the following? a) United Nations Environment Programme b) World Trade Organization c) Multinational corporations d) United Nations Development Programme
✅ Official Answer: (a) UNEP
The Global Environment Facility (GEF) was established in 1992 at the Rio Earth Summit and is closely associated with UNEP. GEF serves as the financial mechanism for several major environmental conventions — UNFCCC (climate), CBD (biodiversity), UNCCD (desertification), the Stockholm Convention (persistent organic pollutants), and the Minamata Convention (mercury). UNEP is one of the three implementing agencies of GEF (along with UNDP and the World Bank). In institutional terms: UNEP provides scientific authority, UNDP provides development expertise, and the World Bank acts as GEF’s Trustee (managing the fund). The GEF Council is the governing body — representing 32 constituencies of developed and developing countries. The GEF Secretariat is based in Washington DC (co-located with the World Bank). While UNDP also plays a role, the primary association for UPSC purposes is UNEP, as GEF was conceptually developed within the UNEP framework and serves primarily environmental objectives under UNEP-administered conventions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Think of it as a building: UNFCCC is the foundation, Kyoto Protocol is the first floor, and the Paris Agreement is the current top floor — all part of the same structure. UNFCCC (1992): The parent convention. A broad framework treaty signed by 198 countries. Establishes the objective (stabilise GHGs), key principles (CBDR), and the institutional structure (COP, Secretariat). Does NOT set specific emission targets for countries. Think of it as the “constitution” of climate governance. Kyoto Protocol (1997): The first “implementing law” under the UNFCCC umbrella. Introduced for the FIRST TIME binding emission targets — but ONLY for developed (Annex I) countries. Developing countries like India had NO binding targets under Kyoto. Introduced flexible mechanisms (CDM, JI, IET). US never ratified; many others left the second commitment period. Now largely superseded. Paris Agreement (2015): The second and current “implementing law.” Learnt from Kyoto’s failure — instead of imposing top-down binding targets, Paris allows countries to SELF-DETERMINE their commitments (NDCs). Applies UNIVERSALLY to all countries. The targets themselves are not legally binding (unlike Kyoto) but the obligation to submit, update, and report on NDCs IS binding. Contains key innovations: Global Stocktake every 5 years, ratchet mechanism (no backsliding), Article 6 carbon markets, Loss and Damage (Article 8). Bottom line for UPSC: UNFCCC = framework (no specific targets) | Kyoto = binding targets for rich countries only | Paris = self-determined pledges for all countries.
Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Sources: UNFCCC official website — COP29 closing statement (November 24, 2024); UNFCCC — COP28 outcomes (December 13, 2023); UNFCCC — COP30 Belém outcomes (November 22, 2025); WMO — COP29 ends with climate financing compromise; UNCTAD — Countries agree $300 billion by 2035 (December 2024); WRI — COP28 outcomes and next steps | COP30 outcomes; Carbon Brief — COP28 key outcomes | COP30 key outcomes (November 2025); European Commission — What did COP30 achieve (December 2025); Duke UNFCCC — NCQG negotiations deep dive (December 2024); GCF — COP29 summary; UN News — Belém COP30 delivers (November 24, 2025); IISS — Baku climate conference (November 2024).

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