COP28 could see move from negotiation to action, experts say

COP28 will be held from Nov 30 2023 to Dec 12 2023 (Shutterstock)
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Updated 20 March 2023
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COP28 could see move from negotiation to action, experts say

  • Annual climate change conference will be held in UAE later this year
  • Event ‘could really become a COP for action,’ think tank says

LONDON: The UAE’s hosting of the UN Climate Change Conference later this year could transform the future of the annual international forum and create momentum for it to become less about negotiation and more about action, experts said.

“COP28 could really become a COP for action. And it could start a transformation of what COPs are, from those meetings of negotiators, to trying to come up with a framework for climate governance around the world, into something that is largely about encouraging climate action,” said Karim Elgendy, associate fellow at the UK-based think tank Chatham House.

“We’re resolving many of the climate justice issues. We’ve resolved most of the Paris Agreement details and what we really have in front of us is ratcheting up and increasing ambition for carbon reduction targets around the world.

“COP28 has this opportunity where it could do exactly that and drive all the parties to push forward with a carbon reduction,” he added.

Elgendy was speaking at a briefing ahead of the publication of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s final report in its sixth assessment cycle on Monday, in which it outlined some key findings and important implications for Middle East countries and expectations for the UAE’s COP28 presidency.

The UN body for assessing the science related to climate change, whose plenary sessions in Switzerland end on Sunday, will distill its findings from the six reports produced since 2015 and amass them in a single “synthesis” report — a comprehensive manual for tackling the crisis.

Elgendy said that Egypt’s hosting of last year’s COP27 placed a “little spotlight” on the region — as Cairo said it was hosting on behalf of Africa — but the Dubai conference would put a “real spotlight” on the Middle East and especially Gulf Cooperation Council countries.

The 2022 IPCC Working Group II Report described the regional impact of climate change for the Middle East as worrisome in relation to how local temperature and precipitation are projected to change. Current predictions indicate that in the coming decades conditions for working and living in the desert region will worsen. Persistent drought, water scarcity and rising sea levels could dramatically decrease food security in the region without swift, immediate large emission cuts.

In the Middle East, climate change has already increased temperatures and decreased rainfall. In Iran and Kuwait, more than half of the summer heat-related deaths between 1991 and 2018 could be attributed to climate change. In the coming decades, the number of days with temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius is expected to rise across the region.

The report said that countries in the Middle East would only be able to adapt to heatwaves and drought to a certain extent, and that hard physical limits to adaptation exist.

Sand- and dust storms have already become more frequent and intense and with further warming, they will become worse, increasing water scarcity and drought in the region.

Water scarcity will particularly affect Saudi Arabia, which could undermine food security, while in Bahrain and Iran, climate change will decrease fish catches, with consequences for food security and income generation. Global warming already threatens important fish species currently found on the coasts of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE, and which are at high risk of local extinction.

As sea levels rise, more land will be submerged, flooded regularly, eroded, or become unsuitable for agriculture due to saltwater intrusion. The economic costs of sea level rise for Gulf countries, in terms of percentage of country-level GDP, would be among the highest in the world by the end of the century. The most threatened countries are Kuwait with 24 percent of GDP, Bahrain with 11 percent and the UAE with 9 percent, according to a study cited in the report.

“The MENA region has a variable rainfall regime that changes dramatically from one year to the next, which means we’re going to get longer droughts. And when it does rain it will rain in a flooding manner which could lead to stormwater management issues because of the region is not prepared for that,” Elgendy said.

“There are tertiary implications we should be concerned about, such as what will this do to social structures and movement, tensions over resources, migration,” he added.

“These may not be of primary concern right now but the region has to be prepared for what effect these implications could have environmentally and socially.”

Camille Ammoun, associate fellow at the American University of Beirut, said that in order to become a real climate actor, the GCC needed to genuinely diversify its economy away from fossil fuel extraction and from the oil economy.

“GCC countries, as high income countries, have economic if not environmental interest to engage in mitigation and adaptation,” he said.

“In terms of adaptation, the Gulf has been working on it for decades investing in several projects that are not necessarily labeled as adaptation projects, especially in infrastructures.

“When you talk about climate action, we talk about mitigation and adaptation, and I think we should focus more specifically, especially in the Gulf region, on diversification because it’s an enabler for climate action globally given the weight the GCC countries have in global diplomacy.”


Higher inflation, tighter credit markets if Iran war persists, experts warn

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Higher inflation, tighter credit markets if Iran war persists, experts warn

  • Moody’s and Fitch have warned of the economic impact of a prolonged conflict
  • Experts tell Arab News that ‘historical playbook’ offers some reassurance

JEDDAH: As the US-backed conflict between Israel and Iran entered its fourth day, economists warned the fallout could spread well beyond the region, threatening higher inflation, tighter credit markets and slower growth in energy-importing economies if hostilities persist.

Global markets have already reacted, with oil benchmarks surging after the conflict disrupted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint handling about a fifth of global seaborne oil trade. 

Spot crude premiums hit multi-year highs as tanker traffic declined and insurers withdrew war-risk cover, underscoring supply risks.

Equity and credit markets also felt the impact, with European stock indexes falling sharply, credit indicators widening and investors seeking refuge in safe-haven assets such as gold and government bonds. Risk-off positioning in credit markets pushed corporate default premiums higher, reflecting mounting geopolitical and financial concerns.

The Strait of Hormuz is a key shipping route, carrying around 20 percent of the global oil supply. A prolonged closure could push oil prices higher, drive inflation up, and tighten financial conditions worldwide, particularly in energy-importing economies.

Fitch highlights sovereign credit risks

Middle Eastern sovereign ratings generally have sufficient headroom to withstand a short regional conflict that does not escalate further, according to Fitch Ratings.

The course of the conflict, the agency’s report added, is uncertain and lasting damage to key energy infrastructure or protracted hostilities could pose risks to regional sovereign ratings.

“The attacks launched by Israel and the US on Iran on Feb. 28 have already had a greater impact than those of June 2025,” the report said.

Fitch believes that the conflict will last less than a month, with the duration being shaped by factors including the destruction of Iranian military capacity and US aversion to a longer, more involved conflict.

“Attacks by Iran and its proxies across the region will continue and could intensify over the short term,” it warned.

The report added that material damage to Gulf Cooperation Council energy export infrastructure would be the most likely channel to pressure sovereign ratings.

The agency emphasized that the Strait of Hormuz, which handles refined products, along with significant liquefied natural gas flows, is assumed to remain effectively closed for the duration of the conflict, whether due to physical blockages, insurance constraints for vessels, or other threat-related factors.

Fitch noted that Saudi Arabia and the UAE have pipelines that allow much of their production to bypass the Strait, and all key oil exporters maintain oil storage outside the region.

It said a near-term hit to oil and gas activity is likely for Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar, which lack alternative supply routes, and for Iraq, whose exports rely heavily on Hormuz.

“Higher energy prices would mitigate the impact of a short-lived disruption on export earnings, to the extent that shipments still get out,” the report said.

The analysis also warned of near-term effects on non-oil economic activity, with much regional air travel suspended, slower consumer activity, and potential lingering impacts on tourism.

Fitch expects these effects on economic growth to be temporary, but there could be longer-term consequences for parts of the region that position themselves as havens for international businesses and expatriates. An outflow of expatriates could put pressure on some GCC housing markets.

Most GCC sovereigns, Fitch said, have substantial financial assets to buffer short-term energy revenue disruptions, and lightly taxed non-energy sectors would limit the fiscal impact of economic slowdowns.

Geopolitical risk is already reflected in sovereign ratings through World Bank governance indicators, with additional overlays applied to Abu Dhabi and the UAE to provide extra rating headroom.

Moody’s flags heightened energy and credit risks

Moody’s said the US-Israel strikes and Iran’s retaliation have sharply heightened geopolitical risk and pushed energy prices higher.

It said the “unprecedented” killing of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and US calls for regime change add further uncertainty over how the conflict may evolve and how long instability could last.

Although core energy infrastructure, it noted, has not been directly targeted, marine traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has slowed to a near standstill as insurers withdraw coverage and operators avoid the area.

Several Middle Eastern ports have suspended operations after Iranian attacks, and significant portions of regional airspace are closed or severely restricted.

Moody’s said the overall credit outlook depends on whether disruptions to the Strait prove short-lived and whether alternative arrangements can preserve energy availability.

In the near term, oil stored outside the Gulf, including in offshore tankers that sailed before the strikes, provides a buffer, similar to that used after the 2019 attack on Saudi oil facilities.

OPEC+’s planned 206,000-barrel-a-day production increase from April offers additional, though limited, mitigation.

“Our baseline scenario is that the conflict is relatively short-lived, likely a matter of weeks, and that navigation through the Strait of Hormuz will then resume at scale. This scenario is unlikely to result in meaningful credit impact on the issuers we rate,” Moody’s said.

However, it warned, any lengthy disruption to the Strait of Hormuz would drive a sustained rise in oil prices, deepen global risk aversion and likely generate wider credit-spread pressure across high-yield markets.

“Such a scenario would heighten refinancing risks for issuers with near-term maturities, particularly in energy-intensive and cyclical industries that already face high input costs. It would also complicate the course of interest rates and central bank decision-making,” Moody’s said.

Oil is geopolitical “fever thermometer”

Mathieu Racheter, head of equity strategy research at Julius Baer, commented that the historical playbook offers some reassurance, as geopolitical shocks in the Middle East have typically triggered short, sharp drawdowns followed by stabilization over subsequent months.

He added that starting valuations matter and many indices, particularly in Europe, are trading close to recent highs, leaving limited room for disappointment, and increasing the risk of near-term de-rating if escalation persists.

“Sector dispersion is therefore likely to dominate: cyclicals, consumer-facing industries, chemicals and transport remain most exposed to sustained energy cost pressure, while oil and gas stocks have historically provided a partial hedge against supply-driven price spikes, an area investors may want to look at from a portfolio-construction perspective, even if we do not actively advocate an overweight,” he added.

Norbert Rucker, head of economics and next-generation research at Julius Baer, said oil acts as a geopolitical “fever thermometer”, reacting to the escalating conflict in the Middle East. The broader economic impact, he added, hinges on oil and gas flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Rucker added that the most feared scenario is not its closure, but serious damage to the region’s key oil and gas infrastructure.

“Over time, the risk of such a disruption seems to lessen. Recognizing the dynamics and uncertainty of the situation, our base case is the usual pattern of a short-lived but more intense spike in oil and gas prices,” he said.

He added that trade out of the Arabian Gulf is likely to remain crippled for days or weeks, but this scenario does not threaten oil and gas supplies.

“We maintain our neutral view on oil but revise the three-month price target upwards and upgrade our view on European gas prices to neutral. We will review this as the situation evolves,” he added.

Speaking to Arab News, CIO at Century Financial, Vijay Valecha, said that the US-Iran war now presents another test to the oil–geopolitics decoupling pattern.

“This poses a threat to Iran’s 3 million barrels per day supply, which amounts to about 5 percent of global output,” he said, adding that the nation also wields great influence over energy supplies, given its strategic location alongside the strait.

He noted that oil from the Arabian Gulf must pass through the waterway to get to major markets such as China, India, and Japan. He added that danger also lies in a regional spillover that would hit global oil arteries.

“Further, if the conflict continues spreading to other Gulf producers, up to one-third of global oil supply would be exposed,” Valecha said.