The Paris Protocol -a blueprint for tackling global climate change beyond 2020

Similar documents
14747/14 MDL/ach 1 DG E1B

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

12165/15 MDL/ach 1 DG E 1B

Vision for Paris: Building an Effective Climate Agreement

REPUBLIC OF THE MARSHALL ISLANDS Submission to the Ad-hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (ADP) October 2014

6061/16 YML/ik 1 DG C 1

COP23: main outcomes and way forward. LEONARDO MASSAI 30 November 2017

7517/12 MDL/ach 1 DG I

COP21 and Paris Agreement. 14 Dec 2015 Jun ARIMA Professor, GrasPP, Tokyo University Executive Senior Fellow, 21 st Century Public Policy Institute

The Paris Agreement: A Legal Reality Check

United Nations Climate Change Sessions (Ad hoc Working Group on Durban Platform ADP 2.6) Bonn, October 2014

Joint Statement Issued at the Conclusion of the 25th BASIC Ministerial Meeting on Climate Change

THE BUSINESS BRIEF. Shaping a catalytic Paris Agreement

Council of the European Union Brussels, 14 September 2017 (OR. en)

Environmental Integrity Group (EIG), comprising Liechtenstein, Mexico, Monaco, the Republic of Korea, and Switzerland

5 TH CLIMATE CHANGE AND DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA ANNUAL CONFERENCE (CCDA-V) KYOTO TO PARIS: AN AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE

2018 Facilitative Dialogue: A Springboard for Climate Action

From Paris to Marrakech: 7th - 18th November 2016 Marrakech, Morocco. GUIDANCE NOTE COP22

The Role of Civil Society at the COP 21 Climate Negotiations

E3G Briefing - The Durban Package

International Affairs Program Research Report

ADP: Compiled text on pre-2020 action to be tabled

OPENING REMARKS FROM COP PRESIDENT, MANUEL PULGAR-VIDAL, MINISTER OF ENVIRONMENT OF PERU. Welcoming Event. December 1, 2014

Summary of the round tables under workstream 1 ADP 2, part 2 Bonn, Germany, 4 13 June 2013

Remarks of Dr. Daniel A. Reifsnyder Deputy Assistant Secretary for Environment Department of State

Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level

PARIS AGREEMENT. Being Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, hereinafter referred to as "the Convention",

SBI: Financial shortfall confronts Secretariatmandated activities, key issues deferred to Paris

Moving into Copenhagen: Global and Chinese Trends. Jennifer Morgan Director, Climate and Energy Program November 2009

Governing Climate Change: General Principles and the Paris Agreement

Enhancing the Effective Engagement of Indigenous Peoples and Non-Party Stakeholders

Major Economies Business Forum: Perspectives on the Upcoming UN Framework Convention on Climate Change COP-17/CMP-7 Meetings in Durban, South Africa

International Climate Policy Leadership after COP23

PROTECTING THE MOST VULNERABLE: SECURING A LEGALLY BINDING CLIMATE AGREEMENT

Delivering on the Paris Promises

15076/16 MS/iw 1 DGE 1B

Looking forward to the Paris climate agreement

Priorities for Nairobi: Charting the course for a safe climate post-2012

FCCC/CP/2015/10/Add.1 Annex Paris Agreement

Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (ADP) Second Session (ADP 2) Submission of the Republic of Korea

Advance unedited version

Conference Report. Resolving Deadlock in Climate Change Negotiations

Results of an online questionnaire survey

Framework Convention on Climate Change

Decision 5/SS6: Climate Change and Africa s preparations for COP22 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) for Pakistan

SPEECH: Andrew Jacobs. Head of Delegation of the European Union for the Pacific

), SBI 48, APA

The New Geopolitics of Climate Change after Copenhagen

Agenda of COP 24 Key issues

European Union South Africa Joint Statement Brussels, 15 November, 2018

ZIMBABWE SPEECH MINISTER OF ENVIRONMENT, WATER AND CLIMATE HON. SAVIOUR KASUKUWERE (MP) COP 19 AND CMP 9 WEDNESDAY, 20 NOVEMBER 2013 WARSAW, POLAND

Integrating Human Rights in the Paris Implementation Guidelines State of Play after the COP-23

Meeting of the Chairpersons of Economic and Environmental Affairs Committees Simone Borg, Ambassador for Malta on Climate Action.

FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE STATEMENT H.E. MR. UMARO SISSOCO EMBALÓ PRIME MINISTER AND PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS

10328/17 MM/JV/mb 1 DG E 1

Progress towards addressing Climate Change in Kenya

The Paris Agreement: Historic Breakthrough or High Stakes Experiment?

Report of the second meeting of the Board on Trade and Sustainable Development to the Civil Society Dialogue Forum

14657/17 MS/ff 1 DGE 1B

NI Summary of COP 15 Outcomes

RT HON SIR ALAN DUNCAN MP

ESA Communications for UNFCCC COP21

ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT JACOB ZUMA AT THE OFFICIAL OPENING OF UNITED NATIONS CLIMATE CHANGE CONFERENCE COP17/CMP7 HIGH LEVEL SEGMENT DURBAN

Joint Statement of the 22 nd EU-ASEAN Ministerial Meeting Brussels, Belgium, 21 January 2019

Positioning voluntary action to raise ambition under the Paris Agreement

The Path to HLPF 2019: from ambition to results for SDG16+

UNU-CRIS Policy Brief No. 9

Options to anchor Nationally Determined Contributions in/under the Paris Agreement

Framing Durban s Outcome. Belynda Petrie OneWorld Sustainable Investments

Pre-COP Ministerial meeting Mexico City, November 4-5, 2010 Marquis Reforma Hotel, Mexico

UNFCCC COP23, Bonn, 6-17 November 2017 Policy messages

The African Ministerial Conference on the Environment Gaborone, Botswana, 17 October 2013

Notes for the third 2016 Environmental Law Brodies Lecture. International Legal Character of the Paris Agreement. 9 February 2016.

Tuesday, 4 May 2010 in New York

Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level. Paris, 7-8 June 2017 CHAIR S STATEMENT

Views on an indicative roadmap

The Swedish Government s overall EU priorities for March 2018

Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action

Mobilizing and transferring knowledge on post-2012 climate policy implications

FCCC/CP/2011/INF.2/Add.1

FROM PARIS TO BEIJING

NOTIFICATION. United Nations Climate Change Conference COP 23/CMP 13/CMA November 2017, Bonn, Germany

Republic of Korea-EU Summit, Seoul, 23 May 2009 JOINT PRESS STATEMENT

Summary report on the workshop on scope, structure and design of the 2015 agreement ADP 2, part 1 Bonn, Germany, 29 April 2013

COP 21 and The Paris Agreement : The Promise of a Legally Binding Agreement on Climate Change

Before and after the Copenhagen Accord: stocktaking pros and cons of the new legal architecture of the climate change regime

Human Rights and International Climate Politics

PERMANENT MISSION OF THE REPUBUC OF BOTSWANA TO THE UNITEO NATIONS. 154 EAST 46TH STREET o NEW YORK, N.Y TEL. (212) STATEMENT BY

FCCC/CP/2015/1. United Nations. Provisional agenda and annotations. I. Provisional agenda

WHS Update WHS 4 Pillars and Teams WFP Member WFP Member

Europe a Strong Global Partner for Development

Topics for the in-session workshop

FCCC/SBSTA/2016/3. United Nations. Provisional agenda and annotations. I. Provisional agenda

Honourable Co-Presidents, Distinguished members of the Joint. Parliamentary Assembly, Ladies and Gentlemen,

11 Legally binding versus nonlegally binding instruments

INCAF response to Pathways for Peace: Inclusive approaches to preventing violent conflict

MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING COOPERATION IN THE FIELD OF CLIMATE CHANGE VULNERABILITY, RISK ASSESSMENT, ADAPTATION AND MITIGATION.

Summit of the Southern European Union Countries Nicosia, 29 January 2019 Nicosia Declaration

MARRAKECH CLIMATE NEWS UPDATES

Transcription:

The Paris Protocol -a blueprint for tackling global climate change beyond 2020 Securing a new international climate agreement applicable to all to keep global average temperature increase below 2 C Adalbert Jahnz, DG European Commission adalbert.jahnz@ec.europa.eu

Content State of negotiations The Commission s vision for the Paris Protocol The EU s intended nationally determined contribution diplomacy and role of civil society

Towards the 2015 Agreement A new international climate agreement applicable to all to keep global average temperature increase below 2 C Process Content Durban 2011: launch of Durban "Mandate" Lima 2014: -shape of INDCs -draft elements of the 2015 Agreement Geneva, Feb 2015: Draft negotiating text INDCs (Intended nationally determined contributions) Warsaw 2013: call for intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs) by March 2015 Paris 2015: adoption of the new Agreement 2015 Agreement Draft negotiating text (addressing mitigation, adaptation, support, transparency) Pre-2020 action

The EU s intended nationally determined contribution Adopted by the Council & submitted to UNFCCC: Binding at least 40% domestic reduction in GHG emissions by 2030 compared to 1990 Absolute reduction from base year emissions Economy wide, 100% of emissions Policy on how to include Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry will be established Fair and ambitious

2030 Framework for and Energy= basis for the EU INDC 2020-20 % Greenhouse Gas Emissions 20% Renewable Energy 20 % Energy Efficiency 10 % Interconnection 2030-40 % Greenhouse Gas Emissions 27 % Renewable Energy 27%* Energy Efficiency 15 % Interconnection * To be reviewed by 2020, having in mind an EU level of 30% New governance system + indicators

EU policies delivering 6

Geneva outcome: draft negotiating text 86 pages Contains the spectrum of positions of all Parties Basis of further negotiations in Bonn throughout this year Not quite clear how it will be taken forward Negotiators must move out of their entrenched positions and focus on the essential and achievable

Commission Communication The Paris Protocol a blueprint for tackling global climate change beyond 2020 EU vision for the Paris protocol Long term goal Fair, ambitious and legally binding mitigation commitments for all Parties Dynamism -5 yearly reviews to increase ambition Robust common rules for transparency and accountability resilient sustainable development Efficient and effective implementation and cooperation

Stayingbelow2 C a global mitigation scenario No new action: risk +3.7-4.8 C temperature rise Delays: add high mitigation/adaptation costs Global mitigation action: we can stay below 2 C 60% global emission by 2050 below 2010 levels Differentiated action: gradual convergence Economic growth maintained, esp. with smart policies Emissions reductions from all sectors: energy, land-use Investments shift in power sector towards low-emission 9

Additional benefits Global transition to low emissions can be achieved while ensuring: Energy security Air quality Innovation and competitiveness Growth and jobs

Strengthening transparency & accountability signal on the agreed direction of travel to all stakeholders Protocol must set out robust rules on monitoring, reporting, verification and accounting Essential to provide confidence that each Party is implementing its commitments and is on track to meet its target Also crucial to build trust, encourage ambition, and to provide predictability and legal certainty System should be fit for the long term Sufficiently flexible to cater for a diverse range of commitment types, national capabilities and circumstances, without undermining transparency, accountability and ambition

Dynamism through regular upward review of ambition - aligning cycle with related UNFCCC processes 12

Three key political issues will pervade the negotiations throughout 2015: Differentiation evolving landscape Aim for economy-wide mitigation commitments by all, onus on major economies INDCs as a vehicle to apply CBDR-RC in a contemporary way Legal form and force Robustness of the new regime Accountability, compliance and rules on MRV Balance Reducing emissions central objective of the Convention The agreement will need to also deliver on "political parity

Key challenges for 2015 Ensuring critical mass of contributions (INDCs) in time by exerting pressure on G20 and Middle Income Countries Securing a participatory and facilitative assessment process prior to Paris a stocktake of adequacy of collective global efforts Establish coalitions among the willing, not just around financing promises but in defence of effective multilateralism and inclusiveness (accountability)

Role of climate diplomacy Members States endorsed Diplomacy Plan as starting point Political build-up and momentum yet to be mirrored in negotiator conduct Strengthen alliances, coordinate and share intel Focused and tailored messaging, exploiting the strength and intelligence of EU diplomatic corps Strategic openings through Summits, G7/G20 and high level dialogues Common EU messages essential to secure wide participation

diplomacy Members States endorsed Diplomacy Plan as starting point Political build-up and momentum yet to be mirrored in negotiator conduct Strengthen alliances, coordinate and share intel Focused and tailored messaging, exploiting the strength and intelligence of EU diplomatic corps Strategic openings through Summits, G7/G20 and high level dialogues Common EU messages essential to secure wide participation

What can civil society do? Help incentivise action in 3 rd countries EU action shows ambition pays Lobby for an ambitious agreement focused on the key priorities Help dispel misunderstandings Engage in the incoming French Presidency s Agenda of Solutions

Major upcoming meetings 20-21 April (tbc) Major Economies Forum, Washington DC. 11-12 May G7 Energy Ministers, Hamburg. 17-19 May Petersberg Dialogue, Berlin. 7-8 June G7 Summit, Germany. 3-14 June Negotiating session on the 2015 Agreement and other issues, Bonn. 13-17 July (tbc) Major Economies Forum. 31 August 4 September; 19 23 October Negotiating sessions on the 2015 Agreement, Bonn. 30 November 11 December COP21, Paris. high on the agenda of EU bilateral relations