World leaders are on course to deliver a new global climate change
treaty in 2015, claimed Marcin Korolec, president of the UN climate
change conference in Warsaw (COP19)
“It has set a pathway for
governments to work on a draft of a new universal climate agreement,”
said Korolec as 11 days of negotiations ended.
CRS’S Head of
Environment commented ‘ this step towards an agreement shows that
Climate Change continues to be a key strategic issue for Government’s,
who will put increasing pressure on organisations to tackling and adept
to climate change. Any organisations thinking about strategic risk and
opportunities in the new ISO 14001 framework must consider long term
carbon management’
The conference agreed a timeframe for countries to table their contributions to reduce or limit greenhouse-gas emissions
under a new global climate agreement, which is due to come into force
in 2020. Details of these contributions have to be outlined ahead of
COP21 in Paris in 2015.
“All countries must contribute to future
reduction efforts, and table their contributions well in advance of the
Paris conference,” confirmed EU climate change commissioner Connie
Hedegaard.
The conference also established an international
mechanism for damage and casualties, which should boost protection of
the most vulnerable people from climate change
and extreme weather, and changes to the UN-REDD framework, which aims
to reduce the amount of carbon emissions generated as a result of
deforestation and forest degradation.
CRS’S Head of Environment
commented ‘ this step towards an agreement shows the continued that
Climate Change continues to be a key strategic issue for Government’s,
who will but increasing pressure on organisations to tackling and adept
to climate change. Any organisations thinking about Strategic risk and
opportunities in the new ISO 14001 framework must include long term
carbon management’
However,
the gulf between developed and developing nations that emerged at COP17
in Durban two years ago has not been bridged. A group of “like-minded”
countries, including China and India, wants to retain the strict
separation between developed and developing countries that is enshrined
in the Kyoto protocol, while industrialised nations, such as the US and
the EU bloc, are keen to develop a new global regime.
“Looking
ahead, 2014 will be a crucial year on the road to Paris, with developed
and developing countries having to deal with the underlying dilemmas and
divisions between them for a deal to be inked in 2015,” said Haege
Fjellheim, senior analyst at Point Carbon.
Source: The Environmentalist
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