Paris COP21: Nations approve landmark climate accord!
-Dr. Abdul
Ruff
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It is a fact that the ongoing so-called wars on terror have accelerated
atmospheric disorder and complicate the wealthier conditions. All UN veto
powers must step forward to place a moratorium on terror wars or any bilateral
wars for at least a couple of years to check if the worsening climate
conditions get stabilized.
_____
Apparently world powers have become serious
now about the impending dangers to earth from deadly climate change. The communiqué of Paris COP21 reveals eloquently that for the first time in human history
the political leaders are concerned about saving the world from early
destruction.
The deal
Representatives
of 195 nations reached a landmark accord at Paris
COP21 to reduce climate change that will, for the first time, commit
nearly every country to lowering planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions to
help stave off the most drastic effects of climate change. The deal adopted on
December 12 after two weeks of negotiations will come into force in 2020 and
commits all countries to cut emissions
The
announcement of accord by French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius was met with
an eruption of cheers and ovations from thousands of delegates gathered from
around the world, represents a major breakthrough on an issue that has foiled
decades of international efforts to address climate change.
The
text sets the objective of making sure that global warming stays “well below” 2
degrees Celsius and continuing to “pursue efforts” to limit the temperature
rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Temperatures have already increased by 1 degree
Celsius since pre-industrial times. To achieve that goal, governments pledged
to stop the rise in greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible without any
time frame. By some point after 2050, man-made emissions should be reduced to a
level that nature can absorb. However, there is no penalty for countries that
miss their emission-reduction targets. The measures also include $100 billion a
year in climate finance for developing countries by 2020, with a commitment to
increase the figure in the future.
Most
environmental activists reacted positively to the agreement, which replaces the
1997 Kyoto Protocol, but warned it was only the first step of many. “World governments finalized a global
agreement today in Paris that lays a foundation for long-term efforts to fight
climate change,” the WWF conservation group said. However, it also warned that
“more effort is needed to secure a path that would limit warming to 1.5C.”
The
accord, which United Nations diplomats have been working toward for nine years,
changes that dynamic by requiring action in some form from every country, rich
or poor. “This is truly a historic moment,” the
United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, said in an interview. “For the
first time, we have a truly universal agreement on climate change, one of the
most crucial problems on earth.”
President Obama, who regards tackling climate change as a
central element of his legacy, spoke of the deal in a televised address from
the White House. “This agreement sends a powerful signal that the world is
fully committed to a low-carbon future,” he said. “We’ve shown that the world
has both the will and the ability to take on this challenge.”
China earlier
said rich developed countries needed to offer more financial support to
developing countries. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi said there were
"no winners or losers". "Climate justice has won and we are all
working towards a greener future," he said.
Scientists and leaders said the talks here represented the world’s last,
best hope of striking a deal that would begin to avert the most devastating
effects of a warming planet.
Poorer countries had pushed for a legally binding provision requiring
that rich countries appropriate a minimum of at least $100 billion a year to
help them mitigate and adapt to the ravages of climate change. Representatives
of some developing nations expressed dissatisfaction.
Solution
Traditionally,
such pacts have required developed economies like the United States to take
action to lower greenhouse gas emissions, but they have exempted developing
countries like China and India from such obligations.
Negotiators from many countries have said that a crucial moment in the
path to the Paris accord came last year in the USA, when President Obama
enacted the nation’s first climate change policy — a set of stringent new
Environmental Protection Agency regulations designed to slash greenhouse gas
pollution from the nation’s coal-fired power plants.
Just
five years ago, such a deal seemed politically impossible. A similar 2009
climate change summit meeting in Copenhagen collapsed in acrimonious failure
after countries could not unite around a deal.
Unlike
in Copenhagen, the stars for this assembly were aligned. The changes that led
to the Paris accord came about through a mix of factors, particularly major
shifts in the domestic politics and bilateral relationships of China and the
United States, the world’s two largest greenhouse gas polluters.
The attempt to
impose emissions targets on countries was one of the main reasons why the
Copenhagen talks in 2009 failed. Nations including China, India and South
Africa were unwilling to sign up to a condition that they felt could hamper
economic growth and development.
Since the Copenhagen deal collapsed, scientific studies have confirmed
that the earliest impacts of climate change have started to sweep across the
planet. While scientists once warned that climate change was a problem for
future generations, recent scientific reports have concluded that it has
started to wreak havoc now, from flooding in Miami to droughts and water
shortages in China.
Recent giant floods in Indian city of Chennai in the South testify to
the horrors of climatic disorder.
Scientific studies have concluded, the world will be locked into a
future of devastating consequences, including rising sea levels, severe
droughts and flooding, widespread food and water shortages and more destructive
storms. The Paris deal could represent the moment at which, because of a shift
in global economic policy, the inexorable rise in planet-warming carbon
emissions that started during the Industrial Revolution began to level out and
eventually decline.
The new deal will not, on its own, solve global warming. At best it will cut global greenhouse
gas emissions by about half enough as is necessary to stave off an increase in
atmospheric temperatures of 2 degrees Celsius or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
However, the targets themselves will not
be legally binding under the Paris deal.
It is a fact that the ongoing so-called wars on terror have accelerated
atmospheric disorder and complicate the wealthier conditions. All UN veto
powers must step forward to place a moratorium on terror wars or any bilateral
wars for at least a couple of years to check if the worsening climate
conditions get stabilized.
Illumination
The climate deal reached in Paris is "the
best chance we have to save the one planet we have", US President Obama
has said. BBC says the speeches and the cliches at the adoption of the Paris Agreement
flowed like good champagne - success after all has many fathers! The main
emotion is relief.
The world has come together around an agreement that will empower us to
chart a new path for our planet. The world finally has a framework for
cooperating on climate change that’s suited to the task. Whether or not this
becomes a true turning point for the world, though, depends critically on how
seriously countries follow through..
The deal could be viewed as a signal to global financial and energy
markets, triggering a fundamental shift away from investment in coal, oil and
gas as primary energy sources toward zero-carbon energy sources like wind,
solar and nuclear power.
The deal that
has been agreed is without parallel in terms of climate change or of the
environment. It sets out a clear long-term temperature limit for the planet and
a clear way of getting there. There is money for poor countries to adapt; there
is a strong review mechanism to increase ambition over time. This is key if the
deal is to achieve the aim of keeping warming well below 2C.
Effects of
climate change are dreadful. More than anything though the deal signifies, a
new way for the world to achieve progress - without it costing the earth. A
long term perspective on the way we do sustainability is at the heart of this
deal. If it delivers that, it truly will be world changing.
Ban Ki Moon said there was “no Plan B” to save the earth and life if the deal fell apart. The Eiffel Tower in Paris was
illuminated with that phrase Friday night.
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