UN official spells out actions to be agreed upon in Copenhagen
December 7th, 2009 - 1:00 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Copenhagen, Dec 7 (IANS) The UN’s top climate change official has outlined actions for governments to agree upon during the Copenhagen climate change conference that opens here Monday, saying negotiators now have the clearest signal ever from world leaders to craft solid proposals to implement rapid action.
“Over the next two weeks, governments have to deliver a strong and long-term response to the challenge of climate change,” Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), told a press conference a day ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference.
The UNFCCC is the first international treaty to call for controls on greenhouse gases and serves as a basic framework for the international community to cooperate on climate change.
De Boer spoke of three layers of action that governments must agree to at the conference: 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.
“Never in 17 years of climate negotiations have so many different nations made so many firm pledges together. Almost everyday now, countries announce new targets for fast action to cut emissions. It’s simply unprecedented,” Xinhua quoted him as saying.
De Boer, who is shepherding UN efforts to forge a deal to curb global warming, expressed confidence that there would be many more steps and also a few turning points on the road to a safe climate future. “Copenhagen must be such a turning point,” he said.
According to de Boer, developed countries will need to provide fast-track funding on the order of $10 billion 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 Copenhagen conference, more than 15,000 participants, including delegates from 192 countries, are expected to renew emissions reduction targets set by the Kyoto Protocol and outline the post-2012 negotiation path.
- The Climate Change Terminology (To go with Curtain Raiser) - Nov 27, 2011
- `Huge opportunity' for stronger climate deal in Mexico: de Boer - Feb 26, 2010
- The way forward for the UN climate change process (Special) - Jan 21, 2010
- Sino-US climate talks helpful, but too late for Copenhagen: Experts - Nov 14, 2009
- UN climate panel chief quits - Feb 18, 2010
- UN chief regrets climate official's resignation - Feb 19, 2010
- Talks won't arrest global warming in next decade: UN climate chief - Jun 07, 2010
- Two resignations, many fallouts in climate geopolitics (Comment) - Feb 21, 2010
- Manmohan Singh absolutely right: UN climate chief - Jul 08, 2009
- Eurozone crisis may cloud Durban climate talks - Nov 13, 2011
- India, China almost certain to sign Copenhagen Accord - Jan 23, 2010
- India, China, Brazil, S Africa support Copenhagen Accord (Lead) - Jan 24, 2010
- I had both failure and success: outgoing UN climate chief (Interview) - Jun 09, 2010
- Costa Rican environmentalist to head UN climate panel - May 18, 2010
- Heat but no light likely at Durban climate talks - Nov 27, 2011
Tags: 17 years, adaptation strategies, climate change conference, climate negotiations, copenhagen conference, emissions, executive secretary, fast track, framework convention on climate change, global warming, greenhouse gases, negotiators, rapid action, shared vision, term response, unfccc, united nations framework convention on climate change, world leaders, xinhua, yvo