COP 21 – PARIS – Dez.2015
MENSAGEM DO PRESIDENTE BARACK
OBAMA (THE WHITE HOUSE) SOBRE O ACORDO DE PARIS 2015 E AS MUDANÇAS CLIMÁTICAS.
The White House
For
Immediate Release; December 12, 2015
Access
RAS in 14dec2015
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/12/12/us-leadership-and-historic-paris-agreement-combat-climate-change?utm_source=email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=email538-text1&utm_campaign=climate
U.S. Leadership and the Historic Paris
Agreement to Combat Climate Change
U.S. LEADERSHIP AND THE HISTORIC PARIS AGREEMENT TO
COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE
Today, [12dec2015] more than 190 countries came
together to adopt the most ambitious climate change agreement in history. The Paris Agreement establishes a long
term, durable global framework to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. For
the first time, all countries commit to putting forward successive and
ambitious, nationally determined climate targets and reporting on their
progress towards them using a rigorous, standardized process of review.
The Agreement provides strong assurance to developing
countries that they will be supported as they pursue clean and climate
resilient growth. The deal builds on the unprecedented participation of
187 countries that submitted post-2020 climate action targets in advance of the
meeting, and establishes a framework to ratchet up ambition by driving down
global emissions in the decades to come.
This new global framework lays the foundation for
countries to work together to put the world on a path to keeping global
temperature rise well below 2 degrees Celsius and sets an ambitious vision to
go even farther than that. This Agreement sends a strong signal to the private
sector that the global economy is moving towards clean energy, and that through
innovation and ingenuity, we can achieve our climate objectives while creating
new jobs, raising standards of living and lifting millions out of
poverty.
The Paris Agreement is also the culmination of a
broader effort by nations, businesses, cities, and citizens to reorient the
global economy to a path of low-carbon growth – progress that will accelerate
as a result of the Agreement’s provisions on mitigation ambition, transparency,
and climate finance.
[1] AN AMBITIOUS AGREEMENT
The Paris Agreement sets forward an ambitious vision
for tackling climate change globally. This includes:
1.1.Strengthening long-term ambition: The Agreement sets a goal of keeping warming well below 2 degrees
Celsius and for the first time agrees to pursue efforts to limit the increase
in temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius. It also acknowledges that in order to
meet that target, countries should aim to peak greenhouse gas emissions as soon
as possible.
1.2.Establishing a universal approach for all
countries: The Agreement moves
beyond dividing the world into outdated categories of developed and developing
countries and instead directs all parties to prepare, communicate and maintain
successive and ambitious nationally determined climate targets. This approach –
where countries set non-binding targets for themselves – paved the way for 187
mitigation contributions this year and will form the basis for a long-term,
durable system to ratchet down emissions.
1.3.Locking in five year target cycles: Under the Agreement, all countries will communicate their climate
targets every five years, starting in 2020. Targets must be submitted 9-12
months before they are finalized, creating time for other countries and civil
society to seek clarity about the targets submitted.
1.4.Ratcheting up ambition over time: Each target should reflect progress from the prior one, reflecting the
highest possible ambition that each country can achieve. This durable, long
term framework will drive greater climate ambition as technologies improve and
circumstances change.
1.5.Rigorous assessment of
global climate action: To help inform
further domestic and global efforts, the Agreement puts in place a mechanism to
assess collective progress on global mitigation action using the best available
science. This process will begin in 2018 and occur every five years to help inform
countries’ future targets and strategies.
1.6.Sending a market
signal on innovation and technology: The mitigation components of the Agreement, combined with a broad push
on innovation and technology, will help significantly scale up energy
investments over the coming years – investments that will accelerate cost
reductions for renewable energy and other low-carbon solutions. This set
of actions will create a mutually reinforcing cycle in which enhanced
mitigation increases investment and enhanced investment allows additional
mitigation by driving down costs.
[2] A TRANSPARENT AND ACCOUNTABLE AGREEMENT
The Paris Agreement establishes a robust transparency
system to help make sure that all countries are living up to their commitments.
This will send a market signal to the private sector and investors that
countries are serious about meeting the targets they have set. These
steps include:
2.1.Putting in place an enhanced transparency
system for all countries: A critical component
of the Agreement, the transparency framework agreed to by parties ensures that
all countries are on a level playing field with the United States with
flexibility for those developing countries with less capacity.
2.2.Requiring countries to report on
greenhouse gas inventories: For the first time, the Agreement
requires all countries to report on national inventories of emissions by
source. This breakthrough will give unprecedented clarity to the public’s
understanding of emissions and pollution in countries throughout the world.
2.3.Requiring countries to report on
mitigation progress: Also for the first
time, countries are required to report on information necessary to track
progress made in implementing and achieving the targets and strategies
countries have put forward.
2.4.Establishing a technical review process
with agreed upon standards: To help ensure
countries are meeting transparency requirements, countries are subject to a
comprehensive technical expert review process that analyzes whether reporting
is in line with the standards adopted. Countries will also engage in a
multilateral review with their peers to share their experiences and lessons
learned.
[3] AN AGREEMENT FOR A LOW-CARBON FUTURE
Tackling climate change will require shifting global
investment flows towards clean energy, forest protection, and climate-resilient
infrastructure. Developing countries, particularly the most vulnerable,
will need support from the global community as they pursue clean and resilient
growth. The Paris Agreement makes real progress on this front by:
3.1.Providing a strong, long-term market
signal that the world is locking in a low-carbon future: The submission of ambitious national targets in five-year cycles gives
investors and technology innovators a clear signal that the world will demand
clean power plants, energy efficient factories and buildings, and low-carbon
transportation not just in the short-term but in the decades to come.
This will make it far easier to draw in the largest pools of capital that need
long-term certainty in order to invest in clean technologies.
3.2.Giving confidence that existing financial
commitments will be met: Many developing
countries, particularly the poorest and most vulnerable, came to Paris seeking
reassurance that a global climate deal is not just about the big emitters but
also supports their transition to a low-carbon growth path. In this regard, we
are already making strong progress towards meeting the existing goal to
mobilize $100 billion from a wide
variety of sources, including both public and private, by 2020. The Paris
outcome provides further confidence that this goal will be met and that climate
finance will continue to flow. For the first time, the Agreement
recognizes the reality that countries like China are already joining the base
of donor countries contributing to climate finance and encourages developing
countries to contribute to climate finance, while reaffirming that the United
States and other developed economies should continue to take the lead.
These components of the Agreement build on steps the
United States took in Paris to demonstrate its commitment to mobilizing finance
from public and private sources for both mitigation and adaptation activities
in developing countries. These steps include:
3.3.Launching Mission Innovation: On the first day of
the conference, President Obama joined other world leaders to launch MISSION INNOVATION, a landmark
commitment to accelerate public and private global clean energy innovation, and
dramatically expand the new technologies that will define a clean, affordable,
and reliable global power mix. Twenty countries representing around 80% of
global clean energy research and development (R&D) funding base committed
to double their R&D investments over five years. In addition, a coalition of 28 global investors led by Bill Gates
committed to support early-stage breakthrough energy technologies in countries
that have joined Mission Innovation.
3.4.Doubling U.S. grant-based public finance
for adaptation by 2020: Secretary of State
John Kerry announced that the United States will double its grant-based, public
climate finance for adaptation by 2020. As of 2014, the United States invested
more than $400 million per year of grant-based resources for climate adaptation
in developing countries. These investments provide vulnerable countries with
support – through both bilateral and multilateral channels – to reduce climate
risks in key areas, including infrastructure, agriculture, health and water
services.
[4] AN AGREEMENT COMPLEMENTED BY SUBNATIONAL, PRIVATE
SECTOR AND CITIZEN ACTION
Because the Agreement should serve as a floor for
future ambitious climate action, complementary actions outside of the Agreement
by sub-national governments, enterprising businesses, investors and
entrepreneurs, and an enlightened global public are important complements to
the Paris Agreement. As part of these global efforts, Americans have
demonstrated their dedication to climate action through a wide variety of
commitments.
4.1.Compact of Mayors: 117 United States mayors have signed onto the Compact of Mayors
pledge. The Compact establishes a common platform to capture the impact of
cities’ collective actions through standardized measurement of emissions and
climate risk, and consistent, public reporting of their efforts.
4.2.Under-2 MOU: States including California, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, Minnesota, New
Hampshire, and New York have signed onto the Under-2 MOU. The MOU commits
signatories to cut greenhouse gas emissions 80-95% below 1990 levels, share
technology and scientific research, expand zero-emission vehicles, improve air
quality by reducing short-lived climate pollutants and assess projected impacts
of climate change on communities.
4.3.American Business Act on Climate Pledge: 154 companies have signed the White House’s American Business Act
on Climate Pledge. These companies have operations in
all 50 states, employ nearly 11 million people, represent more than $4.2 trillion in annual revenue and
have a combined market capitalization of
over $7 trillion. As part of this initiative, each company expressed
support for an ambitious Paris Agreement and announced significant pledges to
reduce their emissions, increase low-carbon investments, deploy more clean
energy and take other actions to build more sustainable businesses and tackle
climate change.
4.5.American Campuses Act on Climate Pledge: 311 colleges and universities representing over 4 million students have
demonstrated their commitment to climate action by joining the American Campuses Act
on Climate Pledge.
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