Last month was the 333rd consecutive month that global temperatures were above the 20th century average, and 2012 will almost certainly be the hottest ever recorded in the US. Hurricanes, heatwaves, wildfires and droughts ruined crops from Kansas to Assam, and Britain has had its wettest summer and driest spring to date. Nigeria, China and much of India and Australia have all had their worst floods in decades. In September, the Arctic Sea ice-cover shrank 50 per cent below the 1979-2000 average.

In a world where climate extremes come faster than ever, the World Bank has found common ground with Greenpeace. Last week, even as the World Meteorological Organisation reported that the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere had reached a record 394ppm, the bank warned that the world is on course for a 4 degrees Celsius temperature rise, which will wreck economies and hopes of development.

The UN, too, estimated greenhouse gas emissions to be 14 per cent above where they need to be to hold temperatures to a manageable 2 degrees Celsius rise. The biggest corporations, including oil companies like Shell, want governments to introduce a carbon price and address climate change. Even Saudi Arabia and the oil exporters of Opec are considering levying a carbon tax to give to the UN fund that helps poor countries adapt to climate change.

However, in the bubble world of international climate diplomacy, little happens. Countries have become less able to collectively address the crisis unfolding around them. When UN talks fell apart in Copenhagen in 2009, world leaders claimed they could cobble together a new binding agreement to cut emissions within six months. That became a year, then two years and now the rich countries tell a bemused public that it will be 2015 at the earliest before a final agreement can be reached. Trillions of dollars can be found to bail out banks in a few months, but the world’s negotiators cannot find a way to get Americans, Britons or anyone to just turn down the air conditioning or lag their roofs to reduce the amount of energy they use.

So what is the point of the massive UN climate talks which started in Doha yesterday? Negotiators from 194 countries are meeting in an atmosphere of mutual mistrust. They are divided and frustrated, and know their political masters mostly seek only painfully slow progress. We already know rich countries will refuse to commit to any further cuts in emissions or to provide more money, just as we know the poor will try to cling to the few global climate agreements reached between nations years ago. There will be fights, tantrums, and righteous anger from the non-government observers and world media.

The blame for this miserable state of diplomatic affairs must be laid squarely on the US in particular and the rich countries in general. For three years now, they have bullied the poor into accepting a new agreement. They have delayed making commitments, withheld money and played a cynical game of power politics to avoid their legal obligations. The resulting distrust has fatally plagued the talks.

In 2009, the rich countries agreed to give $100 billion (Dh367.8 billion) by 2020 to help poor countries adapt to climate change. So far, they have not even provided the $30 billion they promised as a down payment. Instead, they have offered less than the annual bonuses given in the city of London — and most of that in the form of loans, not grants. Led by the US, the rich have now wrecked the Kyoto treaty, the one international agreement that legally binds the rich to making cuts, and now it appears they want to ditch the Bali action plan, which commits the US and other countries to reduce emissions. Meanwhile, Europe is yet to pronounce what cuts it is willing to commit to.

The time for cynicism must be over. Obama can commit the rich world to a generous agreement. Britain can lead Europe. A new Chinese administration can be flexible. The evidence of climate change is clearer than ever, the poor countries have done everything that was asked of them. In short, there is little time left and no more excuses.

 

John Vidal is the Guardian’s environment editor.