COP29 climate talks enter final phase: What happens next?
· RTE.ieMarathon COP29 climate talks have entered their final stretch in Azerbaijan.
Delegates at the summit are attempting to agree a new goal on issues including climate finance.
The talks, which began on 11 November, are due to end on Friday at 2pm Irish time, but COP summits have a history of running long.
Here is a breakdown of the known sticking points and what happens next:
Draft texts
Officials spent the first week trying to agree deals across a range of different issues including finance, carbon markets, the future of fossil fuels and efforts to mitigate the rise in global temperatures.
Now, the outstanding items have been handed over to ministers so they can use their political clout to try to get agreements across the line.
The next steps are about trying to whittle down draft texts containing a huge range of wording options into a final document that can be adopted by consensus at the end of the summit.
Draft texts will be published periodically by the Azerbaijani presidency as they zero in on an acceptable deal.
Climate finance goal
The primary aim of COP29 is to agree a new target for how much money should be provided to developing countries to help them adapt to climate-fuelled weather disasters and transition to cleaner energy systems.
A previous goal to provide €95 billion per year expires in 2025. The new goal needs to be about €950bn annually by the end of the decade, according to experts.
The focus in the negotiating rooms has been on defining the structure of a new target, including what counts as climate finance and who needs to pay in. Only once that is agreed are parties expected to start talking about the size of the target.
Among issues to iron out include whether nations such as China should be counted among the richer core donors, and the degree to which countries should provide finance in the form of grants or loans.
Fossil fuels
Countries have struggled to agree on the right way to follow up on an agreement at last year's summit to transition from fossil fuels.
European states want to see that commitment referenced throughout any deal in Baku to reinforce the importance of following through with firm action. Others, including the Arab group of states, argue it does not need to be.
If past COPs are anything to go by, the moment any text is published, delegates will be searching for the phrase "fossil fuels" to see if there is any sign of backsliding.
Carbon markets
The talks began with an early deal on some of the quality standards that would govern a global market for carbon credits, but there is still much to be agreed on, including how to track trades and disclosure rules.
If fully agreed, market watchers expect a United Nations-backed global market could fund billions of euro of projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, such as reforestation.
Scrutiny of the details is intense amid concern that without watertight regulation carbon credits may not deliver the benefits they claim.
Final hours
COPs rarely finish on time. COP28 in Dubai closed almost a full day after the initial deadline; COP27 in Egypt overran by around 36 hours.
In the final hours, delegations consult intensively in private with the presidency on the proposed deal, often through the night, in search of something that can be adopted by consensus.
Once finalised, every country is called to the main hall to begin an hours-long process of formal approval.