(An ambitious plan emerged from Africa to develop renewable energy
sources by 2020)
World governments finalized a global agreement today in
Paris that lays a foundation for long-term efforts to fight climate change.
More effort is needed to secure a path that would limit warming to 1.5C. This
new agreement should be continuously strengthened and governments will need to
go back home and deliver actions at all levels to close the emissions gap,
resource the energy transition and protect the most vulnerable. The Paris talks
also created a moment that produced announcements and commitments from
governments, cities and business that signalled that the world is ready for a
clean-energy transition.
Governments arrived in Paris on a wave of momentum with more
than 180 countries bringing national pledges on climate action. This progress
was bolstered by impassioned speeches from more than 150 heads of state and
governments and unprecedented mobilisations around the world that included
hundreds of thousands of citizens demanding action on climate change. After two
weeks of negotiations, governments reached an agreement that represents some
progress in the long-term. This must urgently be strengthened and complemented
with accelerated action in the near-term if we are to have any hope of meeting
the ultimate goal of limiting global warming well below 2C or 1.5C.
Additionally, the finance for adaptation, loss and damage and scaled up
emission reductions should be the first order of work after Paris.
While the Paris agreement would go into effect in 2020,
science tells us that in order to meet the global goal of limiting warming to
1.5C or well below 2C, emissions must peak before 2020 and sharply decline
thereafter. The current pledges will provide about half of what is needed,
leaving a 12 to 16 gigatonne emissions gap.
Tasneem Essop, head of WWF delegation to the UN climate
talks:
“The Paris agreement is an important milestone. We made
progress here, but the job is not done. We must work back home to strengthen
the national actions triggered by this agreement. We need to secure faster
delivery of new cooperative efforts from governments, cities, businesses and
citizens to make deeper emissions cuts, resource the energy transition in
developing economies and protect the poor and most vulnerable. Countries must
then come back next year with an aim to rapidly implement and strengthen the
commitments made here.”
Samantha Smith, leader of WWF’s global climate and energy
initiative:
“We are living in a historic moment. We are seeing the start
of a global transition towards renewable energy. At the same time, we’re
already witnessing irreversible impacts of climate change. The talks and
surrounding commitments send a strong signal to everyone – the fossil fuel era
is coming to an end. As climate impacts worsen around the world, we need seize
on the current momentum and usher in a new era of cooperative action from all
countries and all levels of society.”
Yolanda Kakabadse, president of WWF-International
(www.WorldWildlife.org):
“The climate talks in Paris did more than produce an
agreement – this moment has galvanized the global community toward large-scale
collaborative action to deal with the climate problem. At the same time that a
new climate deal was being agreed, more than 1,000 cities committed to 100 per
cent renewable energy, an ambitious plan emerged from Africa to develop
renewable energy sources by 2020, and India launched the International Solar
Alliance, which includes more than 100 countries to simultaneously address
energy access and climate change. These are exactly the kind of cooperative
actions we need to quickly develop to complement the Paris agreement.”
The Paris agreement needed to be fair, ambitious and
transformational. Results in these key areas for WWF were mixed:
Create a plan to close the ambition gap, including finance
and other support to accelerate action now and beyond 2020
The agreeement includes some of the elements of an ambition
mechanism such as 5 year cycles, periodic global stock-takes for emission
reduction actions, finance and adaptation, and global moments that create the
opportunity for governments to enhance their actions. However, the ambition and
urgency of delivering climate action is not strong enough and will essentially
be dependent on governments to take fast and increased action, and non-state
actors, including cities, the private sector and citizens, to continue
ambitious cooperative actions and to press governments to do more.
Deliver support to vulnerable countries to limit climate
impacts and address unavoidable damage.
The inclusion of a Global Goal on Adaptation as well as
separate and explicit recognition for Loss and Damage are important
achievements in the agreement. This goes a long way in raising the profile and
importance of addressing the protection of those vulnerable to climate change.
The Agreement, however, does not go far enough in securing the support
necessary for the protection of the poor and vulnerable.
Establish a clear long-term 2050 goal to move away from
fossil fuels and to renewable energy and sustainable land use.
By including a long-term temperature goal of well below 2C
of warming and a reference to a 1.5C goal, the agreement sends a strong signal
that governments are committed to being in line with science. In addition the
recognition of the emissions gap and the inclusion of a quantified 2030
gigatonne goal should serve as a basis for the revision of national pledges
ahead of 2020.
The agreement sets 2018 as a critical global moment for
countries to come back to the table and take stock of their current efforts in
relation to this global goal and this should result in stronger and enhanced
actions on emission reductions, finance and adaptation.
The Paris agreement made good progress by recognizing, in a
unique article, that all countries must act to halt deforestation and
degradation and improve land management. The agreement also included a process
that can provide guidance for land sector accounting. Adequate and predictable
financial support for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest
degradation could have been stronger.
Mandy Jean Woods
mwoods@wwf.org.za
@MandyJeanWoods
+27 72 393 0027
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