Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

UN climate talks set sights on historic Paris pact

-

To fresh warnings and appeals to seize the political momentum, UN talks opened in Lima Monday tasked with drawing the outlines of a 2015 deal to roll back climate change.

Gathering 195 states, the 12-day meeting also has to agree on the pact's heart -- a format for nations to make pledges to reduce Earth-warming carbon pollution.

These national commitments would form the cornerstone of an unprecedented accord to be sealed in Paris in December 2015 and take effect by 2020.

"2014 is threatening to be the hottest year in history and emissions continue to rise. We need to act urgently," Christiana Figueres, head of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), told delegates.

"We need to put on the table the draft of a new universal climate agreement," she said, urging country negotiators to "make history".

UN nations have vowed to limit global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

Climate change and its consequences
Climate change and its consequences
, AFP

Scientists say Earth is on course for roughly twice this amount by the end of the century -- a recipe for worse droughts, floods, storms and rising seas.

They warn that scant time is left to reduce heat-trapping emissions to safer levels.

"The more we disrupt our climate, the more we risk severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts," said Rajendra Pachauri, head of the UN's panel of climate scientists.

"But fortunately we have the means to limit climate change, to build a more prosperous, sustainable future."

The Earth League, an alliance of climate scientists, weighed in with an appeal for urgency.

"Without collaborative action now, our shared Earth system may not be able to sustainably support a large proportion of humanity in the coming decades," it warned.

Reaching the 2 C target is a political headache, requiring nations to crack down on energy inefficiency and switch from cheap but polluting fossil fuels to cleaner sources.

UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres addresses the public during the Opening Ceremony of t...
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres addresses the public during the Opening Ceremony of the UN COP20 and CMP10 conference in Lima, on December 1, 2014
Cris Bouroncle, AFP

Negotiations have been bedevilled for years by rifts between rich and poor over who should shoulder the burden -- a row complicated by the rise of developing giants such as China, India, Indonesia and Brazil which are now massive carbon emitters.

Peruvian Environment Minister and conference chairman Manuel Pulgar-Vidal said it was time "to build bridges."

"We want this conference to create the kind of trust, the kind of opportunity and the kind of determination that we need to achieve the concrete agreement that the world needs."

About 10,000 delegates, activists, journalists and backroom staff have been accredited for the conference, with some 40,000 police providing security.

- Out of the doldrums -

Since September, top-level interest has hauled the climate issue out of the doldrums where it had lingered after a near-fiasco at a summit in Copenhagen in 2009.

At a summit in New York, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon coaxed world leaders into renewing vows to fight the scourge.

Peruvian security police stand guard at the entrace of the UN COP20 and CMP10 venue in Lima  on Nove...
Peruvian security police stand guard at the entrace of the UN COP20 and CMP10 venue in Lima, on November 30, 2014
Martin Bernetti, AFP

Since then, the three biggest emitters -- China, the United States and Europe -- have sketched plans for contributing to the carbon cleanup.

But the Lima talks must clear several hurdles.

Countries must hammer out a workable negotiating text for next year -- a draft that will likely still have big gaps on issues like the final accord's status under international law, and how pledges should be policed.

Negotiators must also agree on a clear and transparent way by which countries next year will report national pledges to reduce climate-damaging greenhouse gases.

Without this foundation of trust, the voluntary approach that became the UNFCCC's strategy after Copenhagen could founder.

"A strong rules base is essential for ensuring that parties can trust each others' commitments," said European Union negotiator Elina Bardram.

The EU, she said, also insisted that the 2015 accord include regular reviews to monitor headway to the 2 C goal.

People attend a candlelight vigil organized by the Interfaith Council of Peru at a park in Lima  on ...
People attend a candlelight vigil organized by the Interfaith Council of Peru at a park in Lima, on November 30, 2014, before the opening of Climate Change Conference hosted by the government of Peru
Cris Bouroncle, AFP

"This type of process would allow parties to respond to the latest science and consider increasing ambition in the light of new technological developments," she told a press conference.

The world's most climate-vulnerable countries -- small island states and impoverished African countries -- are lobbying for the UNFCCC to uphold a tougher target of 1.5 C -- an issue which comes up for review in 2015.

Another big issue is funding for poor countries, which will be hardest hit by climate change but are least to blame for it.

Developing countries want rich economies to show in Lima exactly how they intend to honour promises to muster up to $100 billion (80 billion euros) in climate finance per year from 2020.

By last week, nearly $10 billion in startup capital had been promised for the Green Climate Fund (GCF), the main vehicle for channelling the money.

To fresh warnings and appeals to seize the political momentum, UN talks opened in Lima Monday tasked with drawing the outlines of a 2015 deal to roll back climate change.

Gathering 195 states, the 12-day meeting also has to agree on the pact’s heart — a format for nations to make pledges to reduce Earth-warming carbon pollution.

These national commitments would form the cornerstone of an unprecedented accord to be sealed in Paris in December 2015 and take effect by 2020.

“2014 is threatening to be the hottest year in history and emissions continue to rise. We need to act urgently,” Christiana Figueres, head of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), told delegates.

“We need to put on the table the draft of a new universal climate agreement,” she said, urging country negotiators to “make history”.

UN nations have vowed to limit global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

Climate change and its consequences

Climate change and its consequences
, AFP

Scientists say Earth is on course for roughly twice this amount by the end of the century — a recipe for worse droughts, floods, storms and rising seas.

They warn that scant time is left to reduce heat-trapping emissions to safer levels.

“The more we disrupt our climate, the more we risk severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts,” said Rajendra Pachauri, head of the UN’s panel of climate scientists.

“But fortunately we have the means to limit climate change, to build a more prosperous, sustainable future.”

The Earth League, an alliance of climate scientists, weighed in with an appeal for urgency.

“Without collaborative action now, our shared Earth system may not be able to sustainably support a large proportion of humanity in the coming decades,” it warned.

Reaching the 2 C target is a political headache, requiring nations to crack down on energy inefficiency and switch from cheap but polluting fossil fuels to cleaner sources.

UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres addresses the public during the Opening Ceremony of t...

UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres addresses the public during the Opening Ceremony of the UN COP20 and CMP10 conference in Lima, on December 1, 2014
Cris Bouroncle, AFP

Negotiations have been bedevilled for years by rifts between rich and poor over who should shoulder the burden — a row complicated by the rise of developing giants such as China, India, Indonesia and Brazil which are now massive carbon emitters.

Peruvian Environment Minister and conference chairman Manuel Pulgar-Vidal said it was time “to build bridges.”

“We want this conference to create the kind of trust, the kind of opportunity and the kind of determination that we need to achieve the concrete agreement that the world needs.”

About 10,000 delegates, activists, journalists and backroom staff have been accredited for the conference, with some 40,000 police providing security.

– Out of the doldrums –

Since September, top-level interest has hauled the climate issue out of the doldrums where it had lingered after a near-fiasco at a summit in Copenhagen in 2009.

At a summit in New York, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon coaxed world leaders into renewing vows to fight the scourge.

Peruvian security police stand guard at the entrace of the UN COP20 and CMP10 venue in Lima  on Nove...

Peruvian security police stand guard at the entrace of the UN COP20 and CMP10 venue in Lima, on November 30, 2014
Martin Bernetti, AFP

Since then, the three biggest emitters — China, the United States and Europe — have sketched plans for contributing to the carbon cleanup.

But the Lima talks must clear several hurdles.

Countries must hammer out a workable negotiating text for next year — a draft that will likely still have big gaps on issues like the final accord’s status under international law, and how pledges should be policed.

Negotiators must also agree on a clear and transparent way by which countries next year will report national pledges to reduce climate-damaging greenhouse gases.

Without this foundation of trust, the voluntary approach that became the UNFCCC’s strategy after Copenhagen could founder.

“A strong rules base is essential for ensuring that parties can trust each others’ commitments,” said European Union negotiator Elina Bardram.

The EU, she said, also insisted that the 2015 accord include regular reviews to monitor headway to the 2 C goal.

People attend a candlelight vigil organized by the Interfaith Council of Peru at a park in Lima  on ...

People attend a candlelight vigil organized by the Interfaith Council of Peru at a park in Lima, on November 30, 2014, before the opening of Climate Change Conference hosted by the government of Peru
Cris Bouroncle, AFP

“This type of process would allow parties to respond to the latest science and consider increasing ambition in the light of new technological developments,” she told a press conference.

The world’s most climate-vulnerable countries — small island states and impoverished African countries — are lobbying for the UNFCCC to uphold a tougher target of 1.5 C — an issue which comes up for review in 2015.

Another big issue is funding for poor countries, which will be hardest hit by climate change but are least to blame for it.

Developing countries want rich economies to show in Lima exactly how they intend to honour promises to muster up to $100 billion (80 billion euros) in climate finance per year from 2020.

By last week, nearly $10 billion in startup capital had been promised for the Green Climate Fund (GCF), the main vehicle for channelling the money.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

Decide your goals and your strategy ahead of time. If you’re clear about whether you’re aiming for long-term growth, short-term gains, or a mix...

World

World leaders express their horror and revulsion at Sunday's mass shooting in which 11 people were killed at Sydney's iconic Bondi Beach.

Tech & Science

OpenAI's core challenge is detecting the multi-step, agentic actions that bypass prompt filters and manifest in live, dynamic environments.

Business

The U.S. sates where workers work the longest hours are found the South.