‘Hop-on, hop-off’ — the state of climate governance


'Hop-on, Hop-off' — The State of Climate Governance

UPSC Study Note | GS-II (International Relations) + GS-III (Environment)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1992 UNFCCC adopted at Rio Earth Summit; entered into force 1994
1997 Kyoto Protocol adopted — first binding emission reduction targets for Annex-I countries; CMP created as its governing body
2005 Kyoto Protocol enters into force
2009 Copenhagen Accord — collapse of binding outcome; political declaration only
2015 Paris Agreement adopted at COP21 (Paris); CMA created as its governing body; NDC architecture replaces top-down Kyoto approach
2016 Paris Agreement enters into force
2021 COP26 (Glasgow) — Glasgow Climate Pact; rules for Article 6 carbon markets finalised
2022 COP27 (Sharm el-Sheikh) — Loss & Damage Fund agreed in principle
2023 COP28 (Dubai) — first Global Stocktake outcome; "transitioning away" from fossil fuels language
2024 COP29 (Baku) — NCQG agreed; USD 300 bn/year by 2035 [S2][S3]

Key predecessor: Kyoto Protocol (1997) used a top-down, legally binding model with differentiated obligations; Paris Agreement (2015) replaced it with a bottom-up, nationally determined model — explaining the shift from obligation to aspiration.


4. Core Static Facts

Institutional Architecture (UNFCCC) [S1]

Paris Agreement Essentials

NCQG (COP29, 2024) [S2][S3]

Loss & Damage Fund

India's Institutional Setup


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The CMA is the governing body of the Paris Agreement (not the Kyoto Protocol). [S1]
  2. The CMP is the governing body of the Kyoto Protocol. [S1]
  3. SBSTA and SBI are the two permanent subsidiary bodies under the UNFCCC. [S1]
  4. COP29 was held in Baku, Azerbaijan, from 11–24 November 2024. [S2]
  5. The NCQG replaces the USD 100 billion/year climate finance goal set at COP15 (Copenhagen, 2009). [S3]
  6. COP29 agreed to USD 300 billion/year by 2035 as the hard NCQG pledge; aspirational goal is USD 1.3 trillion/year by 2035. [S2]
  7. India demanded ≥ USD 1.3 trillion/year through grants and non-debt-inducing support at COP29, speaking on behalf of the Like-Minded Developing Countries (LMDC). [S4]
  8. The Loss & Damage Fund was agreed in principle at COP27 (Sharm el-Sheikh, 2022) — not COP28. [S2]
  9. The first Global Stocktake (GST) under the Paris Agreement was completed at COP28 (Dubai, 2023). [S1]
  10. COP30 is scheduled at Belém, Brazil in November 2025. [S1]
  11. The nodal ministry for India's climate negotiations is MoEFCC (Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change) — not MEA. [S4]
  12. C.K. Mishra who authored the "hop-on, hop-off" article was former Secretary, MoEFCC. [S5]
  13. Under the Paris Agreement, NDCs themselves are not legally binding in specific emission levels — only the obligation to submit and update NDCs is binding. [S1]
  14. The Kyoto Protocol used a top-down, legally binding model; the Paris Agreement uses a bottom-up, nationally determined model.
  15. The consensus rule at UNFCCC COPs means no formal vote is held — effectively giving every party a veto over decisions. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

Detail
GS Paper GS-II (International Organisations, Agreements); GS-III (Environment, Conservation)
Syllabus Heading (GS-II) "Important International Institutions, agencies and fora — their structure, mandate"; "Effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests"
Syllabus Heading (GS-III) "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment"; "International agreements and their implications for India"

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Paris Agreement's bottom-up architecture sacrifices ambition for universality. Critically evaluate this assertion in light of the outcomes of COP28 and COP29." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "Climate finance negotiations have repeatedly exposed the gap between developed-country pledges and developing-country needs. Analyse India's negotiating strategy and the outcome of COP29's NCQG." (GS-II, 15 marks)
  3. "'Ambition appears in preambles; hesitation dominates operative paragraphs.' Critically examine the governance deficits in the current architecture of global climate negotiations." (GS-II/GS-III, 10 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
UNFCCC Bodies & COP Sequence Structural foundation; COPs from COP1 (Berlin, 1995) to COP30 (Belém, 2025)
Paris Agreement (Article-by-Article) NDCs, GST, Article 6 carbon markets, transparency framework — all exam-tested
Loss & Damage Fund Newest climate finance mechanism; heavily tested post-COP27/COP28/COP29
India's NDCs & Climate Finance Needs India's domestic commitments vs. international demands — GS-III core
BASIC Bloc & LMDC India's multilateral negotiating coalitions — geopolitical dimension
IPCC & its Assessment Reports Scientific basis for political commitments; AR6 (2021–22) provides climate benchmarks
Carbon Markets & Article 6 Operationalisation contested for years; finally resolved at COP29; links to carbon credits
Green Climate Fund (GCF) Primary multilateral instrument for climate finance delivery to developing nations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CMP ≠ CMA: Aspirants confuse the two. CMP = Kyoto Protocol's governing body; CMA = Paris Agreement's governing body. Both meet alongside the COP simultaneously.
  2. NCQG quantum confusion: The USD 300 bn is the hard pledge from developed countries; the USD 1.3 trillion is an aspirational mobilisation goal from all sources — frequently conflated.
  3. Loss & Damage Fund host: It is hosted by the World Bank (interim arrangement) — not UNEP, not UNDP.
  4. NDC legal status: The Paris Agreement is a legally binding treaty, but the specific emission targets in NDCs are not legally binding — only the obligation to submit, update, and report is binding. A classic MCQ trap.
  5. Nodal ministry for climate: MoEFCC handles climate negotiations — MEA handles foreign policy. The UNFCCC focal point sits with MoEFCC. Aspirants often write MEA.
  6. First GST timing: The first Global Stocktake was completed at COP28 (Dubai, 2023) — not COP29. The cycle repeats every 5 years.

11. Sources