Governments prepare for climate treaty in Copenhagen

Cop15
World leaders converged in Copenhagen in December for the UN climate change talks which resulted in a Copenhagen Accord that sets a deadline for countries to submit their pledges by Jan 31 2010.

One day ahead of the historic UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, the UN’s top climate change official expressed confidence that the meeting would deliver a comprehensive,ambitious and effective international climate change deal.

“Within two weeks from Monday, governments must give their adequate
response to the urgent challenge of climate change,” said UNFCCC Executive
Secretary Yvo de Boer. “Negotiators now have the clearest signal ever from
world leaders to craft solid proposals to implement rapid action,” he
added.

Referring to numerous emission reduction pledges that developing and
developed countries have made in the run-up to COP 15, the UN’s top climate
change official said there was unprecedented political momentum to clinch
an ambitious deal in Copenhagen.

“Never in 17 years of climate negotiations have so many different nations
made so many firm pledges together,” he said. “So whilst there will be more
steps on the road to a safe climate future, Copenhagen is already a turning
point in the international response to climate change.”

Yvo de Boer spoke of three layers of action that governments must agree to
in the course of the coming two weeks: fast and effective implementation of
immediate action on climate change; ambitious commitments to cut and limit
emissions, including start-up funding and a long-term funding commitment;
and a long-term shared vision on a low-emissions future for all.

As of 2010, immediate action will need to begin on reducing emissions,
adapting to the inevitable effects of climate change, delivering adequate
finance, technology, reducing emission from deforestation in developing
countries and capacity-building.

According to the UN’s top climate change official Yvo de Boer, developed
countries will need to provide fast-track funding on the order of at least
10 billion USD a year through 2012 to enable developing countries to
immediately plan and launch low emission growth and adaptation strategies
and to build internal capacity. At the same time, developed countries will
need to indicate how they intend to raise predictable and sustainable
long-term financing and what their longer-term commitments will be.

Stressing the issue of immediate action, Michael Zammit Cutajar, Chair of
the Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action under the
Convention said: “Copenhagen must be a success that delivers the promise of
the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, that will change the way we
act and cooperate in addressing climate change.”

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, an aggregate
emission reduction by industrialised countries of between minus 25% and 40%
over 1990 levels would be required by 2020 in order to stave off the worst
effects of climate change, with global emissions falling by at least 50% by
2050. Even under this scenario, there would be an only a 50% chance of
avoiding the most catastrophic consequences.

John Ashe, Chair of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Further Commitments for
Annex I (industrialised) Parties under the Kyoto Protocol spoke both of
the need raise the level of ambition of developed countries with regard to
individual targets and the need to make rapid progress on the tools and
rules that developed countries can use to reach their targets, such as
carbon market mechanisms, land use and land use change and new gases. “A
strong, clear agreement that incorporates all the outstanding issues under
the Kyoto Protocol will have to be part of a successful Copenhagen
agreement,” he said.

More than 15,000 participants, including delegates from 192 countries, are
expected to take part in the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen.

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