Draft decisions agreed at UN Climate Change Conference
Draft decisions agreed at UN Climate Change Conference in
Cancún bode well for strong outcome of Mexico gathering
(Cancún, 4 December 2010) – At the UN climate change
conference in Cancún, the two bodies under the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
which advise and implement Parties’ decisions on climate
action successfully concluded their work on Saturday with a
number of significant draft decisions that will be put
forward for adoption in the final plenary of the conference
on 10 December. The two groups are the Subsidiary Body
for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) and the
Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI). The draft
decisions included decisions on continued, strengthened
support to developing countries efforts in adaptation and
mitigation, including concrete technology transfer
projects. "These advances form an important part of the
groundwork for strengthened global climate change action.
They also clearly show that countries have come to Cancún
in good faith to show the world that the multilateral
process can deliver as long as a spirit of compromise,
cooperation and transparency prevails," said Patricia
Espinosa, President of the Conference and Secretary for
Foreign Affairs of Mexico.
"The advances should be seen
as a positive sign for the conference as a whole. I urge all
Parties to sustain this spirit and bring all outstanding
issues to a successful conclusion by the end of the Cancún
climate change conference, to reach a balanced agreement
that will take the world into a new era of cooperative and
increasingly ambitious action on climate change," she
added. The decisions included a near agreement that
carbon capture and storage may be an eligible project
activity under the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development
Mechanism (CDM), provided it complies with stringent risk
and safety assessments. The move is significant because it
presents ministers – who will be asked to give political
guidance to the negotiations next week – with only two
clear options on the issue. "This conclusion is important
because it gives Parties a key to unlock other outstanding
issues under the two tracks of the negotiations on Long-Term
Cooperative Action and in the Kyoto Protocol," said UNFCCC
Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres. Another
achievement was a decision to broaden the mandate of a Least
Developed Countries (LDC) Expert Group and extend its
mandate for a five-year term, the longest period given to
the Group since its establishment in 2001. The Group
provides technical guidance and advice to LDCs on the
preparation and implementation of national adaptation
programmes of action (NAPAs). Since commencement of its
support, 45 LDCs have successfully completed and submitted
their NAPAs, 38 have initiated implementing adaptation on
the ground, and the process has left a wealth of capacity
and awareness across the countries from political levels
down to community levels. Countries also agreed to
strengthen education, training and public awareness on
climate change through increased funding for such
activities, and to engage civil society more strongly in
national decision-making and the UN climate change process.
"Faster and more effective action on climate change requires
governments to welcome the fresh ideas and active
participation of all sides of civil society, especially the
young whose futures are at stake. This underlines the
commitment of the negotiations to remain open, transparent
and engaged,"said Ms. Figueres. About the UNFCCC With
194 Parties, the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC) has near universal membership and is
the parent treaty of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. The Kyoto
Protocol has been ratified by 191 of the UNFCCC Parties.
Under the Protocol, 37 States, consisting of highly
industrialized countries and countries undergoing the
process of transition to a market economy, have legally
binding emission limitation and reduction commitments. The
ultimate objective of both treaties is to stabilize
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level
that will prevent dangerous human interference with the
climate system. ends