On 12 December 2015, countries under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) adopted the Paris Agreement.
The legal nature of this new,
international agreement requires the following actions and steps to bring it
into force. How the large number of national climate plans will be handled in
relation to the agreement is also explained below.
In addition, the Legal Affairs
programme of the UNFCCC secretariat has prepared a legal version (http://unfccc.int/files/meetings/paris_nov_2015/application/pdf/paris_agreement_next_steps_post_adoption.pdf)
of these steps for readers who require the important, detailed formal wording
and terminology that relates to this major international agreement.
Entry into Force
The
Agreement shall enter into force on the 30th day after the date on which at
least 55 Parties to the Convention accounting in total for at least an estimated
55 % of total global greenhouse gas emissions have deposited their instruments
of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession with the Depositary. The
Secretary-General of the United Nations will act as the Depositary of the
Agreement.
To
this end, the UNFCCC secretariat has made available information
(http://unfccc.int/ghg_data/items/9354.php) on the most up-to-date total and
per cent of greenhouse gas emissions communicated by Parties to the Convention
on the website on the date of adoption of the Agreement.
Next Steps
The
authentic text of the Paris Agreement in Arabic, Chinese, English, French,
Russian and Spanish, will be transmitted by the UNFCCC Executive Secretary to
the Treaty Section of the Office of Legal Affairs of the United Nations in New
York as soon as it becomes available.
Following
this, certified true copies will be distributed to all Parties to the
Convention and the Paris Agreement will open for signature at the United
Nations Headquarters in New York from 22 April, 2016 to 21 April, 2017.
The
UN Secretary-General is convening a high-level signature ceremony for the Paris
Agreement on 22 April, 2016 and is inviting all Parties to the Convention to
sign the agreement at this ceremony, or at their earliest opportunity.
National
Climate Plans
Meanwhile,
the agreement also includes a change in status of the intended national climate
action plans which almost all countries submitted to the UN ahead of Paris.
These intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs), which detail what
each country intends to contribute towards reducing global emissions, are set
to become nationally determined contributions (NDCs).
Parties
to the agreement should communicate their first NDC no later than when the
respective instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession has
been submitted.
If
a country has already submitted its INDC before joining the agreement, then
that INDC will be considered the country’s first NDC, unless it indicates
otherwise.
Moreover,
a country has the opportunity of submitting a more ambitious NDC, before it
submits or when submitting its respective instrument of ratification,
acceptance, approval or accession.
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