‘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
- Climate governance refers to the multilateral institutional architecture — treaties, COPs, subsidiary bodies — under which nations negotiate emissions targets, finance, and adaptation obligations. [S1]
- The COP (Conference of the Parties) to the UNFCCC is the supreme decision-making body; it spawns the CMP (for the Kyoto Protocol) and the CMA (for the Paris Agreement) — three overlapping governing bodies circling parallel tracks. [S1]
- Why UPSC cares: Questions routinely appear on COP outcomes, NCQG, India's negotiating positions, loss & damage, and the gap between pledges and action — all dimensions of this topic.
- The article's core thesis: climate negotiations produce process without binding outcomes — an "illusion of progress" — driven by national interest overriding global urgency. [S5]
2. Why in the News
- COP29, Baku, Azerbaijan (11–24 November 2024): Nearly 200 nations agreed to the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) on climate finance — pledging USD 300 billion annually by 2035, replacing the expired USD 100 billion goal. [S2][S3]
- Walkouts by Small Island States and Least Developed Countries (LDCs) over the inadequacy of the pledge (they demanded USD 500 billion/year) dramatised the governance deficit. [S3]
- February 2026 op-ed by C.K. Mishra (former Secretary, MoEFCC) and A.K. Mehta (former Chief Secretary, J&K and Addl. Secretary, MoEFCC) coined the "hop-on, hop-off" metaphor, characterising the CMP and CMA as buses "circling endlessly without real direction." [S5]
- COP30 scheduled at Belém, Brazil, 10–21 November 2025 — the next major milestone under scrutiny. [S1]
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]
- COP — supreme body of the UNFCCC Convention
- CMP — COP serving as Meeting of Parties to the Kyoto Protocol
- CMA — COP serving as Meeting of Parties to the Paris Agreement
- SBSTA (Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice) — permanent subsidiary body
- SBI (Subsidiary Body for Implementation) — permanent subsidiary body
Paris Agreement Essentials
- Adopted: 12 December 2015, Paris (COP21)
- Goal: Limit warming to well below 2°C, pursue efforts to limit to 1.5°C
- Mechanism: NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) — voluntary, self-set targets
- Enabling obligation: Article 4 (mitigation), Article 6 (carbon markets), Article 9 (finance), Article 13 (transparency)
- Global Stocktake (GST): Every 5 years; first completed at COP28 (2023)
NCQG (COP29, 2024) [S2][S3]
- Replaces: USD 100 bn/year goal (set at COP15, Copenhagen, 2009; expired 2025)
- New pledge: USD 300 bn/year by 2035 (public + private from developed countries)
- Aspirational mobilisation goal: USD 1.3 trillion/year by 2035 (all sources)
- India's demand (on behalf of Like-Minded Developing Countries): ≥ USD 1.3 trillion/year through grants and non-debt-inducing support [S4]
Loss & Damage Fund
- Agreed in principle: COP27 (2022, Sharm el-Sheikh)
- Fully operationalised target: 2025 (decision at COP29) [S2]
- Hosted by: World Bank (interim)
India's Institutional Setup
- Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC)
- India's NDC target: 45% reduction in emissions intensity of GDP by 2030 (over 2005 levels); 50% cumulative electric power from non-fossil sources by 2030
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- The "hop-on, hop-off" critique reflects the structural asymmetry: developed countries retain veto-equivalent power through consensus rules, while vulnerable nations (SIDS, LDCs) have moral authority but limited coercive power. [S5]
- US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement (2025, under Trump administration) — a recurring pattern (earlier exit: 2017–2021) — epitomises the "no obligation to reach the destination" problem. [S5]
- India's bloc politics: India negotiates through the Like-Minded Developing Countries (LMDC) grouping and the BASIC bloc (Brazil, South Africa, India, China), pressing for historical responsibility of developed nations. [S4]
- COP presidency rotation (Azerbaijan → Brazil) introduces geopolitical variance in agenda-setting.
Environmental
- UNEP Emissions Gap Report consistently finds NDC pledges leading to ~2.5–3°C warming — far above Paris targets, underscoring the "ambition in preambles, hesitation in operative paragraphs" critique. [S5]
- Loss & Damage as a concept acknowledges that mitigation and adaptation are insufficient for the most vulnerable — a fundamental governance failure made visible. [S2]
- Carbon markets under Article 6 remained disputed for years (resolved partially at COP26/COP29) — illustrating the gap between architecture and operationalisation.
Economic
- USD 100 billion/year goal (2009 pledge) was never fully met in grant form; much counted as loans — a governance credibility problem. [S3]
- The article's argument: markets and corporates benefit from political uncertainty — short-term profits outpace long-term planetary precaution; climate economy shaped by economics, not just science. [S5]
- NCQG's USD 1.3 trillion aspirational goal vs. USD 300 billion hard pledge reveals a financing gap that will dominate COP30 negotiations. [S2][S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- Paris Agreement is legally binding as a treaty but NDCs themselves are not legally binding in terms of specific emission levels — a deliberate design choice to attract US participation.
- Consensus rule (no formal voting procedure agreed upon) functions as a de facto veto for each party — the article calls it "diplomatically disguised as cooperation." [S5]
- Kyoto Protocol's Annex-I / non-Annex-I binary has been superseded by Paris's universal applicability — but legacy debates on Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) persist.
Ethical / Governance
- The article's central thesis: politics has become the "undisputed winner" of climate negotiations — national interest overrides global urgency with "predictable regularity." [S5]
- Consensus requirement ensures no country can be outvoted — structurally privileges status quo over ambition.
- The "hop-on, hop-off" metaphor captures voluntary participation without accountability — nations can exit (US) and re-enter (US 2021, then exit again 2025) without consequence.
- Common man is last: When governments hesitate, markets step in; vulnerable populations bear costs they did not create. [S5]
Administrative
- Three parallel bodies (COP/CMP/CMA) + two subsidiary bodies (SBSTA/SBI) create institutional complexity that can slow decision-making. [S1]
- NDC architecture places burden on national administrative systems — many developing countries lack the MRV (Measurement, Reporting, Verification) capacity to operationalise commitments.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Nov 2024 — COP29, Baku: NCQG agreed; USD 300 bn/year by 2035; walkouts by SIDS and LDCs over inadequacy of pledge. [S2][S3]
- Nov 2024 — Loss & Damage Fund: Decision to fully operationalise by 2025 taken at COP29. [S2]
- Nov 2024 — India at COP29: India (on behalf of LMDC) called for at least USD 1.3 trillion/year in grants and non-debt-inducing support from developed nations. [S4]
- 2025 — US withdrawal (second): Trump administration's re-exit from Paris Agreement, illustrating the "hop-on, hop-off" dynamic literally.
- Nov 2025 — COP30 scheduled, Belém, Brazil: Focus will be on updated NDCs (2035 targets due) and operationalisation of NCQG and Article 6 carbon market rules. [S1]
- Feb 7, 2026 — Op-ed by C.K. Mishra & A.K. Mehta in The Hindu articulates the "hop-on, hop-off" critique of the CMP/CMA architecture. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The CMA is the governing body of the Paris Agreement (not the Kyoto Protocol). [S1]
- The CMP is the governing body of the Kyoto Protocol. [S1]
- SBSTA and SBI are the two permanent subsidiary bodies under the UNFCCC. [S1]
- COP29 was held in Baku, Azerbaijan, from 11–24 November 2024. [S2]
- The NCQG replaces the USD 100 billion/year climate finance goal set at COP15 (Copenhagen, 2009). [S3]
- 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]
- 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]
- The Loss & Damage Fund was agreed in principle at COP27 (Sharm el-Sheikh, 2022) — not COP28. [S2]
- The first Global Stocktake (GST) under the Paris Agreement was completed at COP28 (Dubai, 2023). [S1]
- COP30 is scheduled at Belém, Brazil in November 2025. [S1]
- The nodal ministry for India's climate negotiations is MoEFCC (Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change) — not MEA. [S4]
- C.K. Mishra who authored the "hop-on, hop-off" article was former Secretary, MoEFCC. [S5]
- 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]
- The Kyoto Protocol used a top-down, legally binding model; the Paris Agreement uses a bottom-up, nationally determined model.
- 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:
- "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)
- "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)
- "'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
- CMP ≠ CMA: Aspirants confuse the two. CMP = Kyoto Protocol's governing body; CMA = Paris Agreement's governing body. Both meet alongside the COP simultaneously.
- 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.
- Loss & Damage Fund host: It is hosted by the World Bank (interim arrangement) — not UNEP, not UNDP.
- 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.
- Nodal ministry for climate: MoEFCC handles climate negotiations — MEA handles foreign policy. The UNFCCC focal point sits with MoEFCC. Aspirants often write MEA.
- First GST timing: The first Global Stocktake was completed at COP28 (Dubai, 2023) — not COP29. The cycle repeats every 5 years.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Governing and Subsidiary Bodies | UNFCCC" — https://unfccc.int/process-and-meetings/bodies/governing-and-subsidiary-bodies — (Tier 2)
- [S2] "COP29 UN Climate Conference Agrees to Triple Finance to Developing Countries | UNFCCC" — https://unfccc.int/news/cop29-un-climate-conference-agrees-to-triple-finance-to-developing-countries-protecting-lives-and — (Tier 2)
- [S3] "New Collective Quantified Goal on Climate Finance | UNFCCC" — https://unfccc.int/NCQG — (Tier 2)
- [S4] "India delivers Statement on behalf of Like-Minded Developing Countries at COP29 | PIB" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2073601 — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "'Hop-on, hop-off' — the state of climate governance" — C.K. Mishra & A.K. Mehta — The Hindu, 7 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-07/th_international/articleGOIFI4JFS-13402999.ece — (Tier 4, article excerpt — primary source for the governance critique framing)