The
United Nations Climate Conference opening today in Lima, Peru carries
the prospects of putting the world on the pathway to a comprehensive
climate agreement in 2015, experts say.
Amidst
cautious optimism, African civil society groups under the umbrella of
the Pan-African Climate Justice (PACJA) have called for a draft text to
be adopted in Paris next year that will commit countries to reducing
their greenhouse gas emissions. Speaking at the Pre-UNFCCC COP 20
Consultative Consultative workshop in Lima, Sam Ogallah stated that
PACJA’s strength is embedded on the preparedness of the African civil
society at all levels to ensure that the New Climate Change Agreement to
be concluded in Paris in 2015 is responsive to African aspirations and
realities.
Robert
Chimambo added that Africa expects nothing short of a comprehensive
draft agreement for 2015 in Lima as the stakes are already high with
Africa being at the receiving end of the disastrous consequences of
climate change. The UN environment programme warned earlier this month
that industrialised countries were falling short of the emissions
reductions needed to prevent warming of 2C above pre-industrial levels,
the goal set by world leaders. Carbon dioxide emissions are expected to
reach a record high of 40bn tonnes in 2014. Meanwhile, 2014 is shaping
up to be the hottest on record.
On
the basis of the foregoing, “PACJA will continue to strengthen African
CSOs and our allies from the south and north in the effort to ensure a
broadened ownership of this process. It is our desire, together with
partners convening and supporting this Forum, that all people,
especially those who are at the frontline of climate change impacts, be
involved in the effort to find solution. That’s the only way to make our
voices and choices be heard in the Countdown to Paris, and the only way
to build effective resilience,” Ogallah says.
The
Lima Climate talks which began today and will continue until 12
December includes the 20th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP
20) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the
10th session of the Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of
the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 10). Three subsidiary bodies will
also convene: the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI), the
Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA), and the
Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (ADP).
The
conference will consider agenda items related to finance, mitigation,
adaptation and technology. The COP will also hear a report from the ADP
concerning progress made during the third year of its mandate to develop
“a protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal
force under the Convention applicable to all Parties” by 2015 to enter
into force no later than 2020.
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