Strong leadership must emerge to drive Pacific COP
Strong leadership must emerge to drive Pacific COP climate ambition forward - Greenpeace
Bonn, 17 November 2017 – Greenpeace demanded climate leadership to emerge from the Pacific COP, calling on leaders to listen to the need for urgency and transform their energy and land-use systems.
The Trump administration failed to stop the global climate talks from moving forward, despite its announcement to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, but the world is still in urgent need of action.
The head
of Greenpeace’s political delegation Jens Mattias Clausen
said:
“Leaders must now go home and do
the right thing, prove that they have listened to the voices
of the Pacific, with all their hurt and hope, and understand
the urgency of our time. Talk is not good enough and we
still lack the action we need.
“We call on France, Germany, China and others to step up and display the leadership they claim to stake. Clinging to coal or nuclear power and parading as climate champions while failing to accelerate the clean energy transition is nothing but bad faith.”
This year’s COP placed heightened attention on climate impacts and the need for accountability, but failed to deliver the concrete support that a small island COP should have.
Clausen added:
“We welcome the focus on enhanced ambition and the inclusion of pre-2020 climate action in the design of next year’s stocktake, the Talanoa Dialogue. This will form part of Fiji’s legacy and it is imperative that the dialogue will not just be a discussion but actually lead to countries ramping up their climate targets.
“Bonn still leaves a daunting task of concluding the Paris rulebook next year. Countries need to rediscover the political courage they had in Paris to complete the rulebook on time.”
A deal to break a deadlock in Bonn over the languishing pre-2020 climate action from developed countries and to anchor it in coming climate talks must now prove pivotal in forging additional ambition.
Pacific Island Represent activist Samu Kuridrani said:“The Pacific has been dealing with the devastating impacts of climate change for years so time is a luxury we do not have. While leaders talk, we face the effects. It’s time for leaders to live up to their promises.”
Greenpeace USA climate campaigner
Naomi Ages said:
“We have seen the true
face of America here, exposing how Trump and his regressive
fossil fuel agenda are outnumbered by those who proclaim
with one voice, America is still in. It's been abundantly
clear here that despite Trump, climate action continues.
World leaders must now categorically reject any proposed
weakening of America’s commitments and hold the US
administration to account if it
reneges.”
Greenpeace Germany Executive Director
Sweelin Heuss said:
“This COP saw Germany
drastically lose credibility and leadership on climate
action. Chancellor Merkel’s disappointing speech failed to
align Germany with a coalition of progressive nations
stepping away from coal, raising doubts if Germany is
committed to the ambition of the Paris agreement. Only by
deciding on a coal phase out will the new government be able
to reach its climate targets for 2020 and
2030.”
Greenpeace China Climate Policy Adviser
Li Shuo:
“The Pacific COP has been a
way-station in China's aspiration to become a climate
leader. The transformation from a developing country to a
responsible global power takes time and courage, but climate
leadership demands urgency. In 2018, eyes will increasingly
turn to China to enhance the country's climate ambition and
help conclude the Paris rulebook.”
Greenpeace
Southeast Asia Executive Director Yeb Saño
said:
"The voices from the climate
frontlines have spoken in the Pacific COP. But how much have
those who are historically most accountable for climate
change listened? Those least responsible for climate change
are suffering the worst impacts and this great injustice
must be addressed. Governments and corporations must
urgently change their policies and practices to avert
climate-related human rights
harms."