People take part
in the Claim the Climate march in Brussels, Belgium, on Dec 15, 2018, to demand
action at the United Nations conference on climate change in Poland.
[Photo/Agencies]
Just a week ago, the
prospect of any agreement being reached at the 24th Conference of the Parties
to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was utterly
unimaginable.
But what has been
achieved in the Polish city of Katowice builds on what was agreed in Paris in
2015 and marks a significant step forward in efforts to address climate change.
When the big
oil-exporting nations — the United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait —
blocked an endorsement of the report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, it looked like the conference was going to produce only more hot air.
The report concluded that
while it is possible to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of
the century compared to pre-industrial times, this would require a dramatic
overhaul of the global economy and a shift away from fossil fuels.
That a rulebook was adopted
on Saturday despite this setback is the result of resilient diplomacy and a
triumph for multilateralism.
The rulebook sets out how
countries should report their greenhouses gas emissions and the efforts they're
taking to reduce them in a universal and transparent way. It also aims to ramp
up the commitments made in Paris, with participating countries agreeing to
update their carbon emission reduction goals by 2020. The new pledges will be
reviewed at the UN summit to be held in September 2019.
There are also guidelines
relating to the process for establishing new targets on financial assistance to
support the efforts of developing countries from 2025 onwards as a follow-on to
the current target of mobilizing $100 billion a year from 2020.
There is still a long way
to go, but the outcome does offer hope that the grave consequences of not
putting a brake on global warming are now evident to all and the urgency of
doing so has been brought home.
A report by the World
Meteorological Organization shows that the long-term trend for global warming
remains unabated, with the 20 out of the last 22 years the warmest on record,
with the last four years the warmest. Given the effects of global warming that
have been witnessed so far, we cannot claim to have had no warnings of what
lies in store if we fail to takes effective action.
Countries should stick to
their "common but differentiated responsibilities" and hold to their
commitments for climate action. Any self-calculation will undercut global
efforts in this regard.