Panorama
 
 
 
   
 
 

UN SECRETARY-GENERAL PUSHES GLOBAL CLIMATE AGENDA

Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2007

 

24 Sep 2007 - New York, United States – Participants attending a high-level climate change summit at the United Nations declared that an ambitious comprehensive climate agreement will be negotiated within the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change — building on the Kyoto Protocol — by no later than 2009.

“World leaders today united under the UN banner and declared a stop to dangerous climate change by agreeing to negotiate deep cuts in carbon emissions," said Hans Verolme, Director of WWF’s Global Climate Change Programme.

Convened by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, the summit brought together more than 70 heads of state — a watershed moment in the global climate debate.

“The UN Secretary-General has effectively called for an end of the fossil-fuel age by mid-century," Verolme added. "We congratulate Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon for this show of real climate leadership."

Several countries spoke about the ravages of extreme weather and climate change. Economic assessments indicate that the benefits of early action on climate change greatly exceed the cost of reducing emissions.

“The unvarnished truth is that climate change is here,” Verolme said. “The impending climate catastrophe could cripple economies and devastate livelihoods, so striking a new global climate deal that will promote investment in clean technologies is a top priority.”

Overwhelming support for the launch of negotiations at a climate change meeting scheduled for December in Bali, Indonesia, marks an important step in UN history.
Brian Thomson
Martin Hiller

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WWF comments on a major emittors conference in the US

27 Sep 2007 - US President George Bush has invited the leaders of 16 industrialized and developing countries to Washington, DC, from 27 to 28 September to seek agreement on a new US-led process to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The conference comes only three days after the United Nations climate change summit at which over 80 heads of state committed to launching formal negotiations for a global climate agreement in December in Bali, Indonesia. This comprehensive agreement, to be finalized in 2009, will build on the Kyoto Protocol by broadening carbon markets, mobilizing investments in clean technology, and fund adaptation for the poorest and most vulnerable countries.

WWF's Position:

The US administration must support the UN process and not undermine it.

"The timing of President Bush's meeting risks creating a rival process to the formal UN effort to secure an agreement that builds on Kyoto to reduce global carbon emissions," says Hans Verolme, Director of WWF's Global Climate Change Programme. "President Bush should commit the US to the UN process and the results of the climate summit of Heads of State just held in New York."

Voluntary cuts in emissions are not enough. The White House conference must call for binding domestic cuts in greenhouse gas emissions for industrialized countries of at least 30% by 2020.

"The UN's Summit in Bali this December will begin negotiations for an agreement that builds on Kyoto," says Hans Verolme. "To contribute to global action on climate change, President Bush should use this opportunity to propose meaningful emission cuts and binding targets ready for Bali."

A fair and equitable UN agreement reduces greenhouse gas emissions and keeps warming well below 2°C, as the best-available science tells us.

"The voluntary approach promoted by the White House has fallen well short of stopping climate change," says Hans Verolme. "Now is the time to show we are serious about protecting fragile ecosystems and species but also people from the dangers of climate change."
Press information, photos and reports available at: www.panda.org/climate
Kathleen Sullivan, WWF-US
Erika Viltz, WWF-US

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Ban Ki-Moon sets ambitious climate agenda, says WWF

21 Sep 2007 - UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon is hosting a special UN Climate Change Summit in New York on Monday, 24 September, that will be attended by over 150 political leaders.

The Secretary-General has repeatedly said that climate change is an urgent, global challenge, and has taken a personal interest in creating a worldwide consensus to stop it. The meeting is expected to send a clear message to the UN’s Climate Change Summit in Bali in December to launch formal negotiations for a climate agreement that builds on the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol. Heads of state will present their ideas on the action needed in the areas of mitigation, adaptation, technology and finance.

WWF aims:
• The UN Summit must declare that an ambitious comprehensive climate agreement is negotiated within the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, building on the Kyoto Protocol, by no later than 2009. This agreement should set clear targets to reduce emissions for industrialized countries as well as quantifiable actions for more advanced developing nations.

"Governments have finally realized that climate change poses a real danger to the planet," says Hans Verolme, Director of WWF's Global Climate Change Programme. "For world leaders to come together under the UN umbrella and to commit to deeper cuts in emissions is a watershed moment."

• Economic assessments indicate that the benefits of early action on climate change greatly exceed the cost of reducing emissions. The UN Secretary-General must call for an end of the fossil fuel age by mid-century.

”Clean energy technologies bring many benefits which far outweigh the costs," says Hans Verolme, Director of WWF's Global Climate Change Programme. "The impending climate catastrophe could cripple economies and devastate livelihoods, so a new global climate deal to channel investments to clean technologies is a top priority for the Secretary-General."

• Climate change is already having significant impacts in certain regions, particularly in developing countries such as Small Island States and Least Developed Countries. The UN Secretary -General must call on rich nations to put funds aside to help the poor to deal with the worst impacts of climate change.

"This week's floods in Africa once again show that global warming hits those least responsible the hardest," says Hans Verolme, Director of WWF's Global Climate Change Programme. "It’s the responsibility of the largest polluters to pay and support the least developed countries to adapt."

PRESS BRIEFING
Press Briefing at 9:30-10:15am, Monday, 24 September, Room S-226, UN Building New York.

Speakers:
• Hans Verolme, Director, WWF’s Global Climate Change Programme
• Lo Sze Ping, Campaign Director, Greenpeace China (representing Greenpeace International)
• Meena Raman Chair, Friends of the Earth International
• PJ Partington, Canadian Youth Climate Coalition

*All backgrounders, press work, photos and reports can be found at: http://www.panda.org/climate/UNCS
* For broadcast-standard video, please contact the media team.

Spokesperson
Hans Verolme, Director WWF’s Global Climate Change Programme

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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