UN Climate Change Negotiations to Take Place April
First Round of Formal UN Climate Change Negotiations to Take
Place in April in Bonn, Germany (Bonn,
23 February 2010) – The next round of formal UN climate
change negotiations under the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is scheduled to take
place in April in Bonn, Germany. The meeting will be held
from Friday, 9 April through Sunday, 11 April 2010 at the
Hotel Maritim in Bonn, Germany. The decision was taken 22
February by the Bureau of the Conference of the Parties to
the UNFCCC at its first meeting of the year at the UN
Climate Change Secretariat in Bonn. The 11-member Bureau,
which represents the five regional UN groups, is responsible
for advising the President of the Conference of the Parties
and for taking decisions with regard to the overall
management of the intergovernmental process. In addition
to the gathering in April, two major negotiating sessions
are currently scheduled for 2010: the 32nd session of the
UNFCCC Convention subsidiary bodies from 31 May to 11 June
2010 and the 16th Conference of the Parties (COP 16)/6th
Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the
Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 6) in Mexico from 29
November to 10 December 2010. "Following the UN Climate
Change Conference in Copenhagen, this constitutes a quick
return to the negotiations," said UNFCCC Executive Secretary
Yvo de Boer. "The decision to intensify the negotiating
schedule underlines the commitment by governments to move
the negotiations forward towards success in Cancun," the
UN’s top climate change official said. "This is further
strengthened by the fact that the number of countries that
have written to the secretariat with their country
communications since Copenhagen has now exceeded a landmark
one hundred," he added.
Forty developed country Parties
have so far submitted to the secretariat information on
their 2020 emission cut targets, with various base years.
These Parties represent around 90% of emissions from this
group of Parties. Thirty developing country Parties have
also communicated information on their mitigation
plans. In addition, another thirty-nine Parties have
provided additional information regarding the
Accord. Together, all these countries represent well over
80% of global energy emissions. The mid-term targets of
industrialised countries to cut emissions are listed at: ends