UNFCCC Executive Secretary: Governments can and must deliver
strong Copenhagen deal
The last negotiating session before the historic UN Climate
Change Conference in Copenhagen in December concluded Friday in Barcelona, Spain.
Speaking at a press conference in Barcelona, UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer
reiterated that Copenhagen must result in a strong international climate change deal.
“Copenhagen can and must be the turning point in the international fight against climate
change - nothing has changed my confidence in that,” he said. “A powerful combination of
commitment and compromise can and must make this happen,” he added.
Specifically, progress on adaptation, technology cooperation, reducing emissions from
deforestation in developing countries and mechanisms to disburse funds for developing countries
was made in Barcelona.
“It is essential that practical action is swiftly implemented after Copenhagen to assist
developing countries in their fight against climate change,” the UN’s top climate change official
said.
However, little progress was made on the two key issues of mid-term emission reduction
targets of developed countries and finance that would allow developing countries to limit their
emissions growth and adapt to the inevitable effects of climate change.
“Without these two pieces of the puzzle in place, we will not have a deal in Copenhagen,”
Yvo de Boer said. “So leadership at the highest level is required to unlock the pieces,” he added.
At a summit in New York earlier this year, heads of state and government pledged to
clinch a deal in Copenhagen that provides clarity on: ambitious emission reduction targets of
industrialised countries; nationally appropriate mitigation actions by developing countries with the
necessary support; significantly scaled-up financial and technological resources and an equitable
governance structure for these resources.
“I look to industrialised countries to raise their ambitions to meet the scale of the
challenge we face,” said Yvo de Boer. “And I look to industrialised nations for clarity on the
amount of short and long-term finance they will commit.”
According to Yvo de Boer, developed countries would need to provide fast-track funding
on the order of at least 10 billion USD to enable developing countries to immediately develop 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 there longer-term commitments will
be.
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.
“Negotiators must deliver a final text at Copenhagen which presents a strong, functioning
architecture to kick start rapid action in the developing world,” said Yvo de Boer. “And between
now and Copenhagen, governments must deliver the clarity required to help the negotiators
complete their work,” he added.
More than 4,500 participants, including delegates from 181 countries, took part in the
Barcelona UN Climate Change Talks.
The UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen will take place from
7 to 18 December.