COP24 has been described as the most
important gathering on climate change since the Paris Agreement was signed in
2015.
The
24th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP24) to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) opened on Sunday,
December 2 in Katowice, Poland, with the UN climate chief, Patricia Espinosa, urging
nations to come up with a set of rules to make the Paris
climate deal work.
She
has emphasized that the impacts of climate change “have never been worse”.
According
to UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, “We are in trouble. We are in deep trouble with climate
change. Climate change is running faster than we are and we must catch up
sooner rather than later before it is too late”.
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special report on 1.5 Degrees should
serve a guiding inspiration to the global community that any further delay to
drastically cut emissions will not only be ominous to the current and future
generations, but also the health of the planet.
In
2017, carbon emissions grew by 1.6 percent after a three-year hiatus.
A
leading scientific study has also projected global emissions of carbon dioxide
from fossil fuels and industry will rise for the second consecutive year in
2018, by more than 2 percent to a new record, mainly due to sustained growth in
oil and gas use.
The
Global Carbon Project estimates that CO2 emissions will rise a
projected 2.7 percent, with an uncertainty range between 1.8 percent and 3.7
percent.
African
civil society, led by the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA), is joining
the African governments and other stakeholders in underscoring the vital
importance of a Paris Work Programme that upholds equity and justice.
The
CSOs describe the Katowice Climate Change Conference as critical, “do-or-die”
moment whose outcomes will determine whether the world will march towards
precipice, or trigger a reversal of the growing global warming threats by
laying a solid foundation to cement global cooperation for effective implementation
of the Paris Agreement.
PACJA is going into the conference with nine specific demands:
Demand
1: Global warming must be limited way below 1.5 degrees Celsius this century
Demand
2: Adaptation is crucial to protecting and promoting development gains,
especially in Africa
Demand
3: Climate Financing should be long term and achieve a balance between
mitigation and adaptation support
Demand
4: Capacity building should be enhanced under the Paris Agreement
Demand
5: Loss and damage Parties should commit to full implementation of the Warsaw
International Mechanism for Loss and Damage
Demand
6: Technology deployment and transfer should be supported to enhance resilience
and low carbon development
Demand
7: Gender agenda should be enhanced in the implementation of the Paris
Agreement
Demand
8: Common timeframes and enhancing ambition within the NDC process
Demand
9: Enhanced transparency framework
“We
are calling on parties here in Katowice to fresh energy and push the
negotiations towards concrete outcomes that will address this grave concern to
Africa. The world is watching and the outcome from this COP24 as it will
determine whether the Paris Agreement will be a reality or a mere rhetoric,”
said Mithika Mwenda, Executive Director of PACJA.
UN
Secretary-General, António Guterres, has acknowledged
climate change “is already a matter of life and death” for many, people, regions and countries.
He delivered deliver four simple
messages at the opening of COP24.
First: science demands a
significantly more ambitious response.
Second: the Paris Agreement provides
the framework for action, so we must operationalize it.
Third: we have a collective
responsibility to invest in averting global climate chaos, to consolidate the
financial commitments made in Paris and to assist the most vulnerable
communities and nations.
Fourth: climate action offers a compelling
path to transform our world for the better.
For
African civil society, endless negotiations at COP24 should be viewed as
delaying tactics, emphasizing that there is no option B for world leaders to be
genuinely committed to the implementation of the various provisions of the
Paris Agreement by adopting detailed rules and procedures – otherwise referred
to as the ‘rulebook’.
By Kofi
Adu Domfeh
No comments:
Post a Comment