China and US Bring Early Paris Entry into Force Closer
China and US Bring Early Paris
Entry into Force Big Step Closer - UN Climate Chief Thanks
Countries for Ratification
UN Climate
Chief Thanks Countries for
Ratification
The Two Countries Also
Announce Support for Increased Action on Aviation and
Refrigerant
Emissions
Bonn, Sept 3
2016 -- Ratification of the Paris Climate Change
Agreement by China and the United States – the world’s
top two emitters of greenhouse gases – has brought its
rapid entry into force a big step closer.
“I would like
today to thank China and the United States for ratifying
this landmark agreement—an agreement on which rests the
opportunity for a sustainable future for every nation and
every person,” said Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary
of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC).
“The earlier that Paris is ratified and
implemented in full, the more secure that future will
become, “she added.
The Paris Agreement enters into
force on the 30th day after the date on which at least 55
Parties to the Convention accounting in total for at least
an estimated 55 % of total global emissions have deposited
their instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession with the UN Depositary, in New York.
Today’s
announcement by President Barack Obama and President Xi
Jinping, in which both countries have announced they have
deposited their instruments of ratification with the UN
Secretary-General, puts the balance at just over 39 percent
of the global total, based on the information from countries
provided to the UN in accordance with the decision related
to entry into force of the Paris Agreement.
“Bringing
the Paris Agreement into force underlines that the momentum
and international solidarity witnessed in 2015 continues
into 2016 among big and small nations and among rich and
poorer countries,” said Ms Espinosa.
“The UN
Secretary General’s special event in New York on 21
September offers a further, focused opportunity for others
to join this wave of ambition and optimism towards a better
and sustainable world,” she added.
HFCs and
Aviation
China and the United
States also announced today that they were working together
to secure a comprehensive and ambitious amendment of a
sister treaty—the Montreal Protocol—when governments
meet in Kigali, Rwanda in October.
The amendment is aimed
at managing down the use of chemicals called
Hydroflurocarbons (HFCs) that are now being used in
refrigeration systems such as air conditioners and which are
potent greenhouse gases in their own right.
The two
countries said they wanted to secure not only an
internationally-agreed phase-down of HFCs but an early
‘freeze’ date so that the phase-down starts sooner
rather than later.
Meanwhile the United States and
Chinese leaders also announced backing for action on
aviation emissions under the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) at its meeting later this
month.
Under ICAO, governments will decide whether to
agree a market-based mechanism that can assist in
encouraging aircraft operators to bring down greenhouse
gases from planes.
China and the United States said today
that they plan to be early participants in a voluntary pilot
phase if the decision goes through at the ICAO
conference.
“I would like to commend China and the US
for these two additional announcements. While the Paris
Agreement is the main vehicle for action on climate change,
it is clear that all international agreements need to work
in tandem in order to realize our shared goals and aims,”
she said.
The new announcements by China and the United
States come in advance of the G20 Summit and the next round
of UN climate negotiations—known as COP22—to be held in
Marrakech, Morocco in November.
UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon invited leaders from all countries to New York to
deposit their instruments of ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession. The event also provides an
opportunity to any country to publicly commit to do
so.
In his invitation, Mr Ban said: “The next step in
our collective journey to a low-carbon, climate-resilient
future is to ensure the rapid entry into force of the Paris
Agreement.”
The objective of the Paris Agreement is to
limit global warming well below 2°C and as close to 1.5°C
as possible, to increase economic and social ability to
adapt to extreme climate, and to direct the scale and speed
of global financial flows to match the required path to very
low-emission, climate-resilient development.
Along with
the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Sendai
Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, Paris forms part of a
new and universal vision for a sustainable future around
which the global community converged in 2015.
The unity
of common purpose captured across these three agreements
will now need to leverage an unprecedented scale and depth
of national and international cooperative action involving
all actors at all levels and in all regions of the
world.