Strong Flow of National Climate Plans Bodes Well for Paris
Date
8/29/2015 5:18:51 AM
(MENAFN- Emirates News Agency (WAM))
Bonn 28th August 2015 (WAM)The next round of negotiations towards a new
universal climate change agreement gets underway on Monday bolstered by the
fact that to date over 50 countries covering almost 70 per cent of global
greenhouse gas emissions have already sent in national climate plans.
The rate of submission has been faster than many had anticipated and many
more of these Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) are
expected in the coming weeks.
The INDCs are meant to form a central pillar of the new universal climate
change agreement which governments will reach in Paris in December.
"The response so far has underlined the strong will and intent of nations
to reach an effective Paris agreement" said Christiana Figueres Executive
Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
"On their own the INDCs received before Paris are not going to keep us
below a 2 degrees Celsius rise this century. But they underline a sharp and
positive departure from business as usual and will form the essential
foundation to reach that ultimate goal if governments agree to clearly ramp
up ambition over time" she said.
INDC Response Crosses Developed and Developing World Over 95 per cent of developed countries have already submitted their plans
in line with their responsibility to lead the cuts in emissions.
Many developing countries from all continents including some of the
poorest and most vulnerable to climate change have also presented INDCs
about half of these including necessary action to adapt to climate impacts.
Developed world governments UN agencies and intergovernmental
organizations have been providing assistance to developing countries to
prepare their plans.
In a significant shift all countries so far have presented INDCs which are
truly national in scope with an increased focus on quantifiable objectives.
This should provide greater certainty on future action and direction.
Importantly many take a long term vision of climate action underlining a
growing understanding that dealing with climate change and unlocking the
opportunities will require a transformation of economies now but also over
the decades to come.
Science has underlined that the 2 degrees Celsius goal will require a
peaking of global emissions in the next decade and a very steep decline
after that towards the second half of the century where humans on balance
add no extra emissions to the atmosphere often termed as climate
neutrality.
The UNFCCC secretariat will provide a synthesis report of submitted INDCs
on 1 November 2015.
Bonn Talks Resume with New Streamlined Document The negotiating body under the UNFCCC charged with reaching the Paris
agreement convenes in Bonn Germany from 31 August to 4 September.
In July the Co-Chairs of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform
for Enhanced Action (ADP) presented negotiators with a new tool to help
them to negotiate more effectively through the official text that they have
on the table.
The document covers the substantive content of the new agreement including
mitigation adaptation finance technology capacity building and
transparency of action and consolidates the options under negotiation into
3 coherent baskets: * Elements relevant to the new legal agreement
* Elements relevant to supporting decisions that will accompany the
agreement
* Elements where Governments need still to decide on the optimal
placement With this new document a clearer consideration of the final outcome from
the Paris Conference begins to emerge while not omitting any of the options
that governments put forward in their official text which they had agreed
in Geneva in February.
WAM/tfaham