Lima COP to lay foundation for 2015 agreement

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Governments are preparing to meet for the UN Climate Change Conference in Lima starting this week (Dec. 1-12) to lay the foundation for an effective new, universal climate change agreement in Paris in 2015 while also raising immediate ambition to act on climate change in advance of the agreement coming into effect in 2020.

UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres. Photo: UNFCC

UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres. [Photo/UNFCC] 

The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has this year warned against rising sea levels, storms and droughts as a result of unchecked greenhouse gas emissions, and highlighted the many opportunities of taking climate action.

In November, the UN Environment Programme underscored the need for global emissions to peak within the decade and then to rapidly decline so that the world can reach climate neutrality -- also termed zero net emissions -- in the second half of the century.

"Never before have the risks of climate change been so obvious and the impacts so visible. Never before have we seen such a desire at all levels of society to take climate action. Never before has society had all the smart policy and technology resources to curb greenhouse gas emissions and build resilience. All of this means we can be confident we will have a productive meeting in Lima, which will lead to an effective outcome in Paris next year," Christiana Figueres, Executive Secretary of the UN Climate Convention said.

In Lima, governments meeting under the "Ad Hoc Work Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action" (ADP) need to define the scope and the type of contributions they will provide to the Paris agreement, along with clarity on how finance, technology and capacity building will be handled.

Countries will put forward what they plan to contribute to the 2015 agreement in the form of Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) by the first quarter of 2015, well in advance of the Paris conference in December of next year.

The Lima conference needs to provide final clarity on what the INDCs need to contain, including for developing countries who are likely to have a range of options from, for example, sector-wide emission curbs to energy intensity goals.

Ms. Figueres welcomed the leadership of the EU, the US and China, who have publically announced their post-2020 climate targets and visions.

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