UN CLIMATE CHIEF SAYS ESTIMATE OF
RECORD EMISSIONS IS STARK WARNING TO GOVERNMENTS

Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2011


Bonn, 30 May 2011 - Latest estimates from the International Energy Agency (IEA) showing that greenhouse gas emissions from world energy generation reached record levels in 2010 are a stark warning to governments to provide strong new progress this year towards global solutions to climate change, UN Climate Chief Christiana Figueres said on Monday.

"This is the inconvenient truth of where human generated greenhouse gas emissions are projected to go without much stronger international action now - and into the future," said the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

"Governments are meeting next week in Bonn to prepare for the next major international climate conference to be held in Durban at the end of the year. It is clear that they need to push the world further down the right track to avoid dangerous climate change," the UN's top climate change official said. "I won't hear that this is impossible. Governments must make it possible for society, business and science to get this job done," she added.

The latest IEA estimates published today show that energy-related CO2 emissions in 2010 were at their highest level in history, following a brief dip in 2009 due to the economic impacts of the global financial crisis.

The Paris-based organization also estimated that 80% of all projected 2020 greenhouse gas emissions from the power sector are already locked into the global system of power generation by plants that already exist or are under construction.

Dr. Fatih Birol, Chief Economist at the IEA who oversees the annual World Energy Outlook, today called the latest estimates a "wake-up call" for the international community.

"The world has edged incredibly close to the level of emissions that should not be reached until 2020 if the 2ºC target is to be attained," he said.

"Given the shrinking room for manoeuvre in 2020, unless bold and decisive decisions are made very soon, it will be extremely challenging to succeed in achieving this global goal agreed [at the UN climate change conference] in Cancun," he added.

Alluding to the upcoming round of UN climate change negotiations in Bonn, Germany (6 - 17 June), UNFCCC Executive Secretary Ms. Figueres said:

"No nation will solve climate change alone. And no nation is alone in feeling its impacts. We're only a few days away now from the mid-year climate negotiations and governments need to pick up speed."

In Cancun, governments launched the most comprehensive package ever agreed to help developing nations deal with climate change, including a set of new international institutions to deliver that support.

They also agreed a major effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but left open the question of how to raise their collective level of ambition to keep the global temperature rise at least below two degrees.

Ms Figueres said that, in Durban, governments will have two main challenges that they have agreed to resolve:

First, to strengthen the international conditions that will allow nations to work together to make deeper global emission cuts. This includes the question of deciding the future of the Kyoto Protocol.

Second, to agree on the effective designs of the new climate institutions that will provide adequate and efficient climate support to developing countries. This includes the Green Climate Fund, Technology Mechanism and establishing the Adaptation Committee.

"In the wider world, I see two very encouraging trends," said Ms Figueres. "Countries, including the biggest economies, are moving forward with new

policies that promote low-carbon prosperous growth, even if they don't always attach climate labels to these policies. And the private sector continues to increase its investment in low-carbon business and renewable energy and wants to do more."

"In Durban at the end of the year, governments need to take the new steps that will drive both these trends forward and much faster," she said.

"The meeting in Bonn is a major opportunity to prepare these essential steps," she added.

+ More

Darfur water conference will help build peace in troubled region, says UN

Geneva, 31 May 2011 - The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) will be part of a major international conference on the critical issue of water and sustainable peace in Sudan's Darfur region, announced today.

The Darfur International Conference on Water for Sustainable Peace, to be held in Khartoum on 27 and 28 June, will seek to raise support for a six-year series of projects desperately needed to develop a sustainable and equitable water service system for Darfur.

In the process it will tackle one of the elemental roots of the conflict in recent years - competition over dwindling natural resources.

"While water has become ever more scarce in Darfur, the population has grown dramatically," said Mohamed Yonis, Deputy Joint Special Representative of the African Union-United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID), briefing reporters in Geneva today.

"This is a pivotal moment in efforts to achieve the optimal use of water because for the first time the will is there from government and the international community to work together on joint solutions.

"We in the UN and AU are determined to address this fundamental issue which has driven conflict in Darfur.

"At the same time, we are also on the ground working to protect civilians while our mediators are pressing for a peace agreement in Doha. No matter the outcome, achieving the wise use of water will remain a major issue to be resolved for a sustainable peace in Darfur."

More than 250 international and Sudanese water experts, economists, development specialists and donors are expected to participate in the two-day gathering in June.

The conference will launch an appeal for US$1.5 billion in water sector projects, from rebuilding the water infrastructure devastated by conflict and neglect to introducing innovative technologies and systems, to creating policy for drought preparedness.
Mr Yonis briefed donors and the media in Geneva today on the conference and appeal, accompanied by UNEP's Sudan Programme Manager, Robin Bovey, and the UNICEF Representative for Sudan, Nils Kastberg.

Mr Bovey said the water conference preparations have been a fine model of consultation which will be the basis for a cooperative approach to address the urgent water issues facing communities across Darfur.

"UN agencies, some international non-governmental organizations and various government departments have been involved in the planning, and the Ministry of Irrigation and Water Resources then took the project portfolio to all three Darfur states to seek input from community representatives and state ministries," Mr Bovey said.

The Sudan Ministry of Irrigation and Water Resources is sponsoring the conference, along with United Nations agencies, including UNEP, UNICEF, WHO, UNESCO, FAO and UNOPS.

"What we're aiming to do is to transform water from being a trigger for conflict into a peace-building instrument," said UNICEF Representative Nils Kastberg. "It's an approach that recognizes the unique importance of a resource which is fundamental to all of us, and which is a human right as much as a humanitarian and developmental necessity."

An appeal document is to be released at the Conference, seeking funds for 56 projects in all. The document calls for a major initiative that "fully integrates water resource management and WASH services for the affected population to meet their survival, livelihood and environmental protection needs, (and) which would advance the cause of peace in the region."

For more information on the Darfur International Conference on Water for Sustainable Peace, visit the conference website at: www.darfurwaterforpeace.org

UNEP's work in Sudan is supported by UKAid from the Department for International Development. UNEP is part of the united call for greater donor support for new water projects in Darfur given the urgent need to expand work in this area.

 
 

Source: United Nations Environment Programme
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