Accra Climate Change Talks 2008
Accra Climate Change Talks 2008
Accra UN Climate Change Talks Kick off With Warning That “Clock Is Ticking Down” to New International Climate Change Deal in Copenhagen
The latest round of UN-sponsored global climate change negotiations got underway Thursday in Accra, Ghana. More than 1600 participants, including government delegates from 160 countries and representatives from business and industry, environmental organizations and research institutions are attending the one-week meeting of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
The “UN Climate Change Talks - Accra, 2008” constitute the third major UNFCCC negotiating session this year to get to an agreement on strengthened long-term cooperative action on climate change. The deal is to be clinched in December 2009 in Copenhagen.
The Accra talks were opened by the President of Ghana, John Agyekum Kufuor, who pointed to the fact that the northern part of his country in particular has been witnessing both serious drought and flooding in recent times. In Ghana, rainfall has decreased by 20% over the past 30 years, whilst up to 1,000km2 of land may be lost in the Volta Delta due to sea-level rise and inundation should greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise at the current pace. “There is a real need for strengthening the capacity of countries, particularly in Africa, in coping with such climate shocks,” the President said. “I would therefore like to call for an international deal or “compact”, in which developing countries commit to plan for climate resilient development. In return the international community should commit to provide adequate, predictable, long-term funding and support in terms of technology transfer and capacity building,” he added.
The Ghanaian President warned that
time was running out to negotiate the
crucial
international climate change deal that would not
only drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but
generate the “billions of dollars” poor countries needed
to adapt to the inevitable effects of climate change. “The
clock is ticking,” he said. “We need to be pragmatic and
move beyond rhetoric to make progress as we move towards
Copenhagen”.
In Accra, talks on further commitments for Parties to the Kyoto Protocol will continue. The objective of these negotiations is to clarify the tools and rules available to industrialized countries to reach emission reduction targets beyond 2012, when the first phase of the Protocol expires, along with identifying options to enhance their effectiveness and contribution to sustainable development. This part of the negotiations must be concluded before the group can move on to the issue of determining emission reduction ranges for developed countries at its next meeting in December.
“Parties meeting under the Kyoto Protocol must swiftly reach agreement on the rules and tools that will be available to developed countries to meet future emission reduction targets,” said UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer. “This is essential because the toolbox will in turn determine the level of ambition of developed countries when setting their new targets,” he added.
In the context of the negotiation process on
strengthened long-term cooperative action against climate
change, a workshop will be held in Accra on sectoral
approaches and sectorspecific actions. The Kyoto
Protocol’s clean development mechanism presently only
allows emission reductions from projects to be credited.
This and other mechanisms could be expanded to engage
important sectors of the economy, for example the steel,
cement or power-generating
sectors. A second workshop
will deal with policy approaches and positive incentives to
reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation
in developing countries. Emissions from deforestation
accounts for about 20% of global greenhouse gas
emissions.
Furthermore, for the first time in the
negotiations leading up to Copenhagen, there will be a joint
discussion on both the finance and technology needed to
limit emissions and adapt to climate change. This will
create an interlinked discussion on a number of elements of
the Copenhagen agreement. “Parties will look not only at
what is needed in terms of funding, but also at how funding
should be generated in the context of a new international
deal, and precisely
what technologies are required,”
the UN’s top climate change official said. “The debate
will also give an indication of the infrastructure needed to
implement a shared vision in the areas of finance,
technology and capacity building,” de Boer added.
The Accra gathering is the last UN-sponsored global climate change meeting before the UN Climate Change Conference in Poznań, Poland (1 to 12 December). A further series of major UNFCCC negotiating sessions are planned for 2009, culminating in the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December.
ENDS