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CLIMATE SCIENCE
UN meeting urges 'highest political commitment' on climate change
By Mari�tte Le Roux
Marrakesh, Morocco (AFP) Nov 17, 2016


Britain ratifies global climate pact
London (AFP) Nov 17, 2016 - Britain ratified the Paris agreement on climate change Thursday, joining more than 100 other countries in a move that campaigners hope will prompt US President-elect Donald Trump to honour the deal.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson signed the Paris Agreement as countries met in Morocco for the latest round of United Nations climate talks, focused on implementing the treaty by the end of the year.

"The Paris Agreement has completed the 21 day sitting period before parliament and the Instrument of Ratification has been signed by the Foreign Secretary," the foreign ministry said in statement.

The pact commits countries to limiting global temperature rises to "well below" 2 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels and pursue efforts to keep increases to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The move was hailed by environmental campaigners.

"It has never been more important for the world to stand together on climate change and the UK joining the Paris Agreement is a welcome signal," said Stephen Cornelius, chief adviser on climate at WWF-UK.

ClientEarth said: "The UK's ratification of the Paris Agreement is a welcome sign that the world is forging ahead with climate action.

"President-elect Trump should take this ratification, and the comments by China, France and others in recent days as a warning that any reneging on the agreement would make the US a global environmental pariah," the group said in a statement.

Trump's election victory this month has shocked UN diplomats and notably put a question mark over the fate of the Paris climate deal championed by UN chief Ban Ki-moon during his 10 years at the helm.

Speaking at the UN climate conference in Marrakesh, US Secretary of State John Kerry underlined the perils that await the world if leaders drag their feet on cutting planet-warming greenhouse gases.

"At some point even the strongest sceptic has to acknowledge that something disturbing is happening," Kerry told delegates on Wednesday.

Before his election, Trump called climate change a "hoax" perpetrated by China and vowed to "cancel" the hard-fought Paris Agreement concluded last year to limit dangerous global warming.

China and the United States, the two largest emitters, gave a major boost to the accord when they signed on during a summit in September between Presidents Xi Jinping and Barack Obama.

Nearly 200 nations made an appeal Thursday for the "highest political commitment" to combat climate change, at a UN gathering overshadowed by Donald Trump's threats to withdraw the US from a global pact to turn back global warming.

"We call for the highest political commitment to combat climate change, as a matter of urgent priority," 197 parties to the UN's climate convention stated in the "Marrakesh Action Proclamation" issued at the annual UN climate conference.

The parties -- 196 nations and the EU bloc -- urged one another to boost finance for projects to prevent worst-case-scenario global warming and cope with the effects of unavoidable climate change.

"Our climate is warming at an alarming and unprecedented rate and we have an urgent duty to respond," they warned.

The call came on the penultimate day of a conference tasked with drafting a blueprint for enacting the so-called Paris Agreement adopted last December and since ratified by 111 parties -- most recently Britain on Thursday.

The Paris pact sets the goal of limiting average global warming to 2.0 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels, by cutting greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels.

Countries, including the United States, have pledged to curb emissions under the deal by shifting to renewable energy sources.

But Trump has vowed to boost oil, gas and coal and "cancel" the global deal.

Thursday's proclamation noted "extraordinary momentum" underway on climate change, which it said was "irreversible".

"It is being driven not only by governments, but by science, business and global action of all types at all levels," said the document.

It urged all countries to "urgently" raise their commitments to reducing greenhouse emissions. Collectively, scientists say, current pledges place the world on course for warming of 3 C or more.

"We call for strong solidarity with those countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change," said the communique.

And it urged "strengthening cooperation amongst ourselves... to meet the long-term temperature goals of the Paris Agreement".

- Everyone's responsibility -

Experts say warming over 2 C will result in land-gobbling sea level rise, worsening storms and droughts, disease spread and conflict over ever-scarcer resources.

To highlight the stakes, US government scientists said Thursday that the first 10 months of the year were the hottest in modern times -- and 2016 will likely surpass 2015 as the warmest year on record.

"The Marrakesh Action Proclamation reaffirms the world's commitment to tackling climate change at a time when our resolve has been called into doubt," said Thoriq Ibrahim, environment minister of the Maldives -- and island nation at high risk of climate change-induced sea level rise.

"Every country has a responsibility to do their part to protect the climate that sustains us all."

Mohamed Adow, a climate negotiations expert for Christain Aid, said the declaration by so many heads of state, "demonstrates just what a global consensus there now is around climate change."

It also "underlines the determination of world leaders that they will not let the election of Donald Trump hijack the important work being done to secure the safe future of our planet," he said.

While waiting for the new US president to make his climate position clear, many now look to the rest of the world to bolster the Paris Agreement.

In a "high-level segment" of the gathering, starting with heads of state and government on Tuesday and ministers over the next two days, speaker after speaker recommitted their nations to the pact.

On Thursday, the BASIC group of Brazil, South Africa, India and China, stressed they would "continue and strengthen" their own actions, while stressing "there can be no backtracking on commitments from developed countries and no attempt to renegotiate the terms of the agreement reached in Paris".

With just a day of negotiations to go, finance from rich nations for developing country climate projects remains a thorny issue -- made trickier by the prospect of America withdrawing its cash commitments, running into billions of dollars.


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Previous Report
CLIMATE SCIENCE
UN seeks more climate finance from rich nations
Marrakesh, Morocco (AFP) Nov 15, 2016
The UN urged rich nations Tuesday to ramp up financial aid to help poor countries shore up their defences against climate change. Finance is a hot-button topic at the annual round of UN climate talks underway in Marrakesh, Morocco - the first since the world's nations adopted a hard-fought agreement last year to rein in global warming from fossil fuels. Rich nations pledged back in 2009 ... read more


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