The
Climate Action Network (CAN) has welcomed the declaration by 23 nations to step
up climate ambition.
The
declaration, issued on the sidelines of a week of ministerial meetings on
climate change underscores the urgency for countries to enhance their
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) by 2020 in line with the Paris
Agreement; put in place the necessary long-term strategies to reach net zero
emissions; and secure the support and investment to ensure effective
implementation.
Countries
now need to walk the talk. The International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
Special Report on 1.5C due to be released in October is likely to confirm that
limiting warming to 1.5C is feasible, but hard to achieve.
This
makes it essential and urgent for all countries
to join these front-runners and step up to enhance their NDCs by 2020. The
process requires adequate finance to flow to countries that need it to
establish the necessary infrastructure for a green and carbon-free economy.
“It
is great to see these 23 governments joining the global call to step up climate
action. The transition to 100% renewable energy is an economic opportunity for
growth and job creation,” said Wael Hmaidan,
CAN Executive Director. “Now, we need to see if the remaining countries
are able to step up their climate ambition and enhance their targets as well by
the next climate talks in Poland.”
Signatories
to the declaration include Argentina, Britain, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Denmark, Ethiopia, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Maldives, Marshall
Islands, Mexico, Monaco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Rwanda, Saint
Lucia, Spain and Sweden.
Positive
signals also came from the EU
Commission, which announced it would be in a position to increase ambition.
However,
around 200 nations collectively made a promise to their citizens in 2015 as
part of the Paris Agreement to ratchet up their commitments and targets every
five years.
This
declaration signals a step in the right direction, but many more countries
should now similarly indicate
they will fully implement the Paris Agreement and enhance their NDCs by 2020.
These
initiatives are important to drive both strong momentum for a positive
conclusion of the Talanoa Dialogue and a strong outcome at the upcoming UN talks in Katowice, Poland. 2018 is
a very important year to trigger the process of NDC revision by all countries.
The
political phase of the Talanoa Dialogue needs to result in a strong and
universal decision as the first stock-taking exercise of countries' efforts
since Paris was agreed in 2015.
Indeed
the 2019 United Nations Secretary-General Climate Summit is an important
milestone but all countries need to commit as early as December 2018 at the UN
talks to prepare the ground nationally for raised and updated NDCs by 2020.
The
countdown has started and if countries start reviewing their NDCs right after
COP24, that still only leaves one year to complete the process; that time is
needed for multi-stakeholder engagement to build comprehensive and inclusive
NDCs involving all actors of society. Governments will only succeed if people
are on board.
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