UN Urges Nations to Act on Cancún Agreements
UN Climate Change Chief Urges Nations to Act on Cancún Agreements
New York, Dec 20 2010 11:10AM
The United Nations climate change chief today called on countries to follow up on the recent conference in Cancún with higher global emissions cuts and the rapid launch of new institutions and funds.
The
agreements reached at the conference, which concluded in the
Mexican city of Cancún on 11 December, include formalizing
mitigation pledges and ensuring increased accountability for
them, as well as taking concrete action to tackle
deforestation, which accounts for nearly one-fifth of global
carbon emissions.
Delegates at the 16th Conference
of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) also agreed to ensure no gap between the
first and second commitment periods of the Kyoto Protocol,
an addition to the Convention that contains legally binding
measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and whose first
commitment period is due to expire in 2012.
“Cancún was a big step, bigger than many imagined
might be possible. But the time has come for all of us to
exceed our own expectations because nothing less will do,”
said UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres.
She stressed that the ‘Cancún Agreements’ needs
to be implemented as quickly as possible, and be accompanied
by “credible accountability systems that will help in
measuring real progress.”
If all these targets
and actions are fully implemented, UN estimates show they
could deliver only 60 per cent of the emission reductions
that science says will be needed to stay below the agreed
two degree rise in average temperatures, and two degrees
does not guarantee the survival of the most vulnerable
peoples.
“All countries, but particularly
industrialized nations, need to deepen their emission
reduction efforts and to do so quickly,” said Ms.
Figueres.
Agreement was also reached in Cancún on
a package to help developing nations deal with climate
change, including new institutions, funding channels and a
technology transfer mechanism to help the developing world
build its own sustainable, low-emissions future, adapt more
effectively to climate change, and preserve and protect its
forests for the good of all nations.
Ms. Figueres
stressed that these institutions must be launched quickly,
noting that millions of poor and vulnerable people around
the world have been waiting years to get the full level of
assistance they need.
She added that the UNFCCC
will support all governments in this new work, and said she
hoped that it will be possible to point to new and concrete
examples of success when the parties to the Convention a
year from now in South Africa.
“I expect in
particular to see rapid decisions on appointing the board of
the new Green Fund and the Committee of the Technology
Mechanism. I also look forward to receiving the details of
fast-start financing from industrialized countries so the
secretariat can compile the information that shows clearly
the amounts that have been raised and are being
disbursed,” she said.
The Green Fund establishes
a long-term climate finance institution for the first time
under the oversight of the parties to the UNFCCC and with a
24-member board that balances representation between
developed and developing nations.
“Cancún has
significantly expanded the menu of climate implementation
and resources available to countries under the United
Nations,” said Ms. Figures. “The imperative to act is
now.”
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also
highlighted the achievements of the Cancún conference in a
message to the closing ceremony for the International Year
of Biodiversity, held in the Japanese city of Kanazawa on
Saturday.
In particular, he noted the important
agreement reached on REDD Plus, backed by the financial
resources to implement it. Reducing Emissions from
Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) is an effort to
create a financial value for the carbon stored in forests,
offering incentives for developing countries to reduce
emissions from forested lands and invest in low-carbon paths
to sustainable development.
REDD-Plus goes beyond
deforestation – which some estimates show has contributed
up to one-fifth of global carbon emissions, more than the
world’s entire transportation sector – and includes the
role of conservation, sustainable management of forests and
enhancement of forest carbon stocks.
“By
promoting the conservation and sustainable management of
forests we can not only mitigate climate impacts and
increase resilience, but go a long way towards slowing the
accelerating rate of biodiversity loss,” Mr. Ban said in
the message, which was delivered by Ahmed Djoghlaf,
Executive Secretary of the Convention on Biological
Diversity.
ENDS