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

Similar documents
Views on an indicative roadmap

7517/12 MDL/ach 1 DG I

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

Framework Convention on Climate Change

Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) for Pakistan

NI Summary of COP 15 Outcomes

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

Framing Durban s Outcome. Belynda Petrie OneWorld Sustainable Investments

UN FCCC: COP 18/CMP 8

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

UNITED NATIONS. Distr. GENERAL. FCCC/CP/2009/3 13 May Original: ENGLISH. Note by the secretariat

In Pursuit of a Binding Climate Agreement: Negotiators expand the mitigation tent but reinforce the ambition gap

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

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

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

International Climate Change: A Negotiations Side-by-Side

COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. accompanying the

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

Provisional agenda and annotations. I. Provisional agenda. II. Background

Speaker Profiles. Graeme Dennis Partner, Sydney T F

E3G Briefing - The Durban Package

Taking stock of Copenhagen: outcomes on REDD+ and rights *

The Copenhagen Climate Change Conference: A Post-Mortem

HUMAN RIGHTS ANALYSIS OF THE DOHA GATEWAY (UNFCCC 18TH CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES)

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

Why do we need voluntary commitments?

14747/14 MDL/ach 1 DG E1B

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

The Paris Agreement: A Legal Reality Check

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

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

A Post-Kyoto Framework for Climate Change

GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF MALAWI

What happened? Is it a good deal? Who wins and who loses? What is next?

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

H.E ARC. DARIUS DICKSON ISHAKU

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

12165/15 MDL/ach 1 DG E 1B

Results of an online questionnaire survey

Evaluating Copenhagen (7-18 December 2009)

From Copenhagen to Mexico City The Future of Climate Change Negotiations

IMPLEMENTATION OF THE BUENOS AIRES PLAN OF ACTION: ADOPTION OF THE DECISIONS GIVING EFFECT TO THE BONN AGREEMENTS

What Cancun can deliver for the climate

FCCC/CP/2001/13/Add.3 English Page 14. Decision 22/CP.7

Arrangements for intergovernmental meetings

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

Copenhagen Accord and Discord:

Durban: Post-COP17 Briefing

KYOTO PROTOCOL TO THE UNITED NATIONS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE. Final draft by the Chairman of the Committee of the Whole

BACKGROUNDER. U.S. Leadership in Copenhagen. Nigel Purvis and Andrew Stevenson. November 2009

KYOTO PROTOCOL TO THE UNITED NATIONS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE

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

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

KYOTO PROTOCOL TO THE UNITED NATIONS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE*

FCCC/APA/2018/4, paragraphs 16 18; FCCC/SBSTA/2018/6, paragraphs 12 14; and FCCC/SBI/2018/11, paragraphs

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

Vision for Paris: Building an Effective Climate Agreement

Decision 1/CP.6 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE BUENOS AIRES PLAN OF ACTION. Recalling the provisions of the Convention and its Kyoto Protocol,

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

Framework Convention on Climate Change

Procedural Rules of the Climate Negotiations Introduction

NOTIFICATION. United Nations Climate Change Conference Durban, 28 November to 9 December 2011

KYOTO PROTOCOL TO THE UNITED NATIONS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATECHANGE

OVERVIEW SCHEDULE. United Nations Climate Change Conference Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia 3-14 December 2007

Additional tool under item 8 of the agenda

UNITED NATIONS. Distr. GENERAL. FCCC/KP/AWG/2010/3 23 April Original: ENGLISH CONTENTS. I. OPENING OF THE SESSION (Agenda item 1)...

Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level

Earth Negotiations Bulletin

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

Daily Programme. Ad Hoc Working Group on Further Commitments for Annex I Parties under the Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP) (Open meeting)

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

Advance unedited version

Advance unedited version. Draft decision -/CMP.3. Adaptation Fund

Proposal from Papua New Guinea for amendments to the Kyoto Protocol

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT LAW ON CLIMATE CHANGE

14657/17 MS/ff 1 DGE 1B

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action under the Convention on its sixth session, held in Bonn from 1 to 12 June 2009

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

The Minutes of the 5th meeting of the Committee on Trade and Sustainable Development under the EU-Korea FTA, 24 March 2017, in Brussels

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

15076/16 MS/iw 1 DGE 1B

Ideas and proposals on the elements contained in paragraph 1 of the Bali Action Plan

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

THE SYSTEM OF PROVIDING INFORMATION ON SAFEGUARDS (SIS) SHOULD BE BASED ON RIGHTS-BASED INDICATORS TO ASSESS, AMONG OTHERS:

Before I may do so, allow me to paraphrase a passage from the Genesis chapter 1, verse 26 of the Bible where it states that our

Mr. President, Mr. President,

2018 Facilitative Dialogue: A Springboard for Climate Action

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Glossary of Acronyms... 3 Executive Summary I. Introduction Assumptions and Scope Linkages with Other Issues...

Topics for the in-session workshop

Legal considerations relating to a possible gap between the first and subsequent commitment periods

Framework Convention on Climate Change

FCCC/CP/2013/1. United Nations. Provisional agenda and annotations. I. Provisional agenda

The New Geopolitics of Climate Change after Copenhagen

Major clash of paradigms in launch of new climate talks

Governing Climate Change: General Principles and the Paris Agreement

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

Note by the Chair. Addendum

NOTIFICATION. United Nations Climate Change Conference Doha, Qatar, 26 November to 7 December 2012

International Negotiation on Climate Change: Issues for Nepal

PROTECTING THE MOST VULNERABLE: SECURING A LEGALLY BINDING CLIMATE AGREEMENT

Transcription:

Pre-COP Ministerial meeting Mexico City, November 4-5, 2010 Marquis Reforma Hotel, Mexico Elements for a balanced outcome Speaking notes AWG-LCA Chair, Mrs. Margaret Mukahanana-Sangarwe Introduction I thank you very much for inviting me and for the opportunity to speak at this meeting. This meeting comes at an opportune time when we need to resolve issues that will allow us to have a balanced outcome in Cancun a few weeks ahead. In Copenhagen, the Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action under the Convention was mandated to continue its work with a view to present an outcome to the Conference of the Parties in Cancún for adoption. I have had the honour of being entrusted to chair these negotiations. I can say that the AWG-LCA has made good progress, since Copenhagen, in the negotiations towards an outcome to be presented to COP 16. It has also advanced closer to a shared understanding of what the form of this outcome should be and what elements it should contain. Balanced outcome I used the opportunity to consult Parties during the session in Tianjin on their expectations for the outcome of the work of the AWG-LCA.These consultations revealed that there is a shared desire for a balanced outcome. This means: o Balance between the LCA and the AWG-KP, respecting the two-track approach; o Balance within the LCA, across all elements of the Bali Action Plan, and o Balance among elements of the Bali Action Plan, in terms of a comparable level of detail. These consultations also revealed that Parties agree that the Cancún outcome should not prejudge prospects for a legally-binding outcome in the future. One decision I have reflected on the form of this outcome in light of progress in Tianjin and it is my assessment that the appropriate way to present the LCA outcome to the COP would be through one draft decision that encompasses the full scope of the AWG-LCA

outcome, rather than through a set of separate decisions. I believe that working on one decision would facilitate efforts to achieve balance in the outcome. Acknowledge texts that are almost ready (so less time is needed to work on those issues) and refer to Shared Vision Regarding the state of play on the issues to be reflected in the outcome, my assessment is as follows: In my view, the AWG-LCA has almost concluded its work on adaptation, REDD+, agriculture and technology, and could deliver concrete results on those areas without having to devote much time to them in Cancún. Other issues, like the use of market-based mechanisms or other approaches to enhance the cost-effectiveness of mitigation actions or the issue of capacity-building, while they progressed in Tianjin, further work will be needed. The issue of a shared vision for long-term cooperative action has proven more complex. I am aware that Parties have deeply held views on the fundamental questions involved. Still, it is my assessment that Parties will be ready in Cancún to confirm a long-term global goal for emission reductions, at least initially expressed as an objective to limit the increase in global average temperature to well below 2 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial level, in the context of the relevant principles. Such an agreement would be made possible by agreeing at the same time to launch an effective and meaningful process to review the long term global goal and the progress in reaching that goal. Need to address BIG questions, otherwise nothing will move forward However. Agreement in these areas will not be reached without movement on the difficult issues which are at the core of a package in Cancún, namely: o Mitigation, including measurement, reporting and verification or MRV o Finance, including governance and long-term financing It is my assessment that in order for Cancún to deliver an outcome, we need to address the apparent deadlock over mitigation commitments by developed country Parties under the Convention and the Kyoto Protocol. a) Mitigation There are two central challenges in the area of mitigation: o First the relationship between AWG-KP and AWG-LCA when it comes to mitigation by developed country Parties and o Second, the balance between mitigation commitments by developed country Parties and mitigation actions by developing country Parties.

I understand the difficulties surrounding commitments under the Kyoto Protocol. Parties need to come to an understanding of how to make incremental progress on that question in Cancun in order for progress on developed country mitigation in the context of the AWG-LCA. Agreement on a step forward on developed country mitigation in the context of the LCA is also dependent on progress on actions by developing country Parties. In turn, progress on developing country mitigation depends strongly on progress on mitigation by developed country Parties as well as on long-term finance. This creates a series of interconnected chicken and egg situations, which calls for compromise and political leadership to seek a middle ground. This circle can be broken by working simultaneously on incremental progress on Annex I mitigation under the Convention and under the Protocol. This can be done by adopting a decision capturing the information on mitigation targets and actions currently on the table and providing direction to further work in both AWGs post- Cancún. There is willingness to establish a Registry process to record NAMAs seeking support and initiate effort to developing its operational modalities. The issue of MRV is intimately linked to both mitigation and finance and in effect creates the bridge between action and support. In my assessment, Parties recognize the need to enhance MRV arrangements for both developed and developing country Parties under the Convention. They also acknowledge that MRV-related provisions are and will remain more rigorous for developed compared to those for developing country Parties. In consultations hosted by Mexico in this city two weeks ago, I put forward a straw man proposal on how MRV could be addressed, and am encouraged by the reaction from Parties. For developed country Parties, it is my assessment that with good will of the Parties, agreement is possible on enhancing reporting, on guidance to develop rules for reporting, including detailed reporting on the provision of support, on accounting and review, and on the purpose and scope of international consultations for developed country Parties, bearing in mind that ICA is part and parcel of MRV. Similarly, for developing country Parties, agreement is possible on enhanced reporting, including predictability of support for reporting efforts, on guiding principle for domestic verification, and on the purpose and scope of MRV including international consultations and analysis for developing country Parties. Agreement in these areas would enable Cancún to launch of a process to develop specific guidelines and modalities. I am also confident that Parties can agree on launching implementation of the early phases of activities relating to REDD-plus. This is essential in order to maintain the momentum for international cooperative action in the forest sector.

Views are still divided on next steps in international efforts to control emissions from aviation and maritime bunkers fuels. It is my assessment that Parties can agree to take notice of recent progress made by the relevant international organizations in these sectors and prepare further steps by the Convention on this sector. The issue of the socio-economic impacts of response measure is an important issue and will only become more important as the rate of the transition to a low-emission economy accelerates. It is critical that Parties agree on the means to address the legitimate concerns of Parties in this context in a structured manner, including on any institutional arrangements needed to make progress. Parties have also divergent views on the role of market based mechanisms, especially in the absence of a decision on the form of the future regime. On the other hand, the decision on market based mechanisms will impact on pledges by developed countries. However, it is my assessment that agreement on the guiding principles for the use and development of market-based mechanisms and possibly on launching a process for their development is possible and will unlock decisions on pledges under the Kyoto Protocol. b) Finance Finance is the third core element of the Cancún Package and the key to progress. There we have two components: o The establishment of a new climate fund and. o The mobilization of long-term finance and the oversight over financial flows. Parties made good progress on the Fund in Tianjin. In my view, the establishment of the new fund is a key element of the outcome and I am confident that this can be completed. I am concerned that there is disagreement over how to organize a professional design phase for the new Fund and that Parties should find a mutually agreeable way to resolve this issue. There is more uncertainty on how to take the broader issue of the mobilization of long-term finance forward. A pragmatic solution could be for Cancún to launch a strategic process involving Ministries of Environment and Finance that builds on the findings of the SG s Advisory Panel on Climate Financing. In addition, it is my assessment that a body needs to be established to provide oversight over financial flows and improve coordination and coherence among financial institutions. Closing remarks Let me assure you that I am fully committed to the objective of presenting an outcome that can be fully agreed by the COP and that I will work closely with Parties and the President, to deliver success in Cancún.

I have presented to you my vision of what Cancún could deliver if we all work together to make it happen. There are still important obstacles to overcome and there are significant risks that disagreement over the long-term direction of international cooperation on climate change or disagreements over any of the specific issues under negotiation, could derail the process. I hope you agree with me that there is now too much to loose to allow disagreements to overshadow the fundamental underlying agreement on most of the important issues. International action on climate change needs to be accelerated and this can only be done by overcoming our differences and reaching an agreement. Your negotiators have been working hard. I hope Ministers will provide negotiators with a full mandate to show flexibility to finish the job. I look forward to the discussions during these two days and hope that many of the unresolved issues which I have mentioned above will be clarified to allow a successful outcome in Cancun. I thank you very much for your attention and wish you a successful meeting.