Key UN climate change meeting kicks off in Valencia
Government officials and scientists from around the world have gathered in Valencia, Spain, for a United Nations
conference that will culminate with the release later this week of a seminal report on addressing the impacts of climate
change.
Over the next five days, delegates to the 27th session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will
synthesize the information gathered by the Panel's various working groups, and released in a series of three reports
earlier this year, into one succinct report that will form the basis of future policy action on climate change.
The Fourth Assessment Report - to be released on Saturday - will guide participants at a major summit next month in
Bali, Indonesia, as they seek to try to hammer out a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol, which contains legally
binding targets for reducing emissions but expires in 2012.
"What is produced here in Valencia is the guide that every one of the thousands of delegates attending the crucial
Climate Convention meeting in Bali will be packing in their suitcases and slipping in their back pockets," the head of
the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said in his address to the opening of the session.
"It is the final full stop behind the question as to whether climate change is happening and the likely impacts - many
of which will happen in the time-frame of people alive today, not in some far distant future," stated Achim Steiner.
Mr. Steiner added that "the momentum on climate change in 2007 has being nothing short of breathtaking," hailing the
work of the IPCC and its scientists - the recipients of this year's Nobel Peace Prize, along with Al Gore. It was the
IPCC which earlier this year issued a report confirming the existence of global warming likely driven by human
activities.
He noted that countries facing the climate challenge now increasingly need assistance and eventually resolution on the
question of national impacts - not least for national action on adaptation or "climate proofing economies."
Making governments, business, cities, civil society and citizens understand the risks but also the rewards they face is
part of the "heavy lifting" needed in order to sustain the transition to a low-carbon society over the long haul," Mr.
Steiner said.
Ban Ki-moon, who has made a climate change a priority issue during his term as Secretary-General, will be in Valencia
for the launch of the Fourth Assessment Report on Saturday.
Over the weekend, Mr. Ban became the first UN Secretary-General to make an official visit to Antarctica to see
first-hand the effects of climate change on its melting glaciers.
"Antarctica is a natural lab that helps us understand what is happening to our world," stated Mr. Ban. "It is here where
our work, together, comes into focus. We see Antarctica's beauty - and the danger global warming represents, and the
urgency that we do something about it."
ENDS