UNFCCC Secretariat Issues Call For Proposals
UNFCCC Secretariat Issues Call For Proposals For Host Of New Climate Technology Centre
(Bonn,
19 January 2012) – The secretariat of the UN Climate
Change Convention (UNFCCC) has issued a call for proposals
for the host of the Climate Technology Centre (CTC), as
requested by governments at the UN Climate Change Conference
in Durban at the end of last year. The CTC, along with its
Network, is the implementing arm of the Technology Mechanism
established at the UN Climate Change Conference in Cancun in
2010. The mechanism is designed to stimulate technology
cooperation and to enhance the development and transfer of
climate-sound technologies to support action on mitigation
and adaptation on the ground by developing countries. The
secretariat has called on interested organizations,
including consortia of organizations, to submit their
proposals for hosting the Climate Technology Centre by 16
March of this year. "At the UN Climate Change Conference
in Durban, governments gave themselves a heavy workload for
2012, and the call for proposals is the first big follow-on
step from that meeting. It is also a major step towards
delivering real and tangible transfer of technologies and
know-how to developing countries," said UNFCCC Executive
Secretary Christiana Figueres.
"Governments decided in
Durban to launch the selection process of the host of the
CTC which is an important step to make the Technology
Mechanism become fully operational in 2012, so we should
very soon see concrete results," she added. The objective
of the Climate Technology Centre and its Network is to
assist developing countries to build or strengthen their
capacity to make their technology choices and to facilitate
the preparation and implementation of technology projects
and strategies. This is to happen both through a wider and
deeper collaboration among all countries and with the active
engagement of relevant stakeholders, including international
organizations, the research community, academia and the
private sector. After the proposals from institutions have
been received by the UNFCCC secretariat, the secretariat
will convene meetings of an evaluation panel comprising 6
members of the Technology Executive Committee (TEC) to
conduct an assessment and recommend short-listed candidates
for consideration by the UNFCCC's Subsidiary Body for
Implementation (SBI) at its thirty-sixth session in May
2012. The SBI will consider and then recommend the host of
the CTC for final approval by the next UN Climate Change
Conference, to be held in Qatar at the end of
2012. Further information can be found at: For
enquiries about the call for proposals, please send an email
to CFP_CTCN@unfccc.int About the UNFCCC With 195 Parties,
the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) has near universal membership and is the parent
treaty of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. The Kyoto Protocol has
been ratified by 193 of the UNFCCC Parties. Under the
Protocol, 37 States, consisting of highly industrialized
countries and countries undergoing the process of transition
to a market economy, have legally binding emission
limitation and reduction commitments. The ultimate objective
of both treaties is to stabilize greenhouse gas
concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that will
prevent dangerous human interference with the climate
system. ENDS