Under the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the 21st session of
the Conference of the Parties (COP 22) and the first session of the Conference
of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement
(CMA 1) were held in Marrakech, Morocco, from 7-18 November 2016.
According to UNFCCC, the Conference successfully demonstrated to the world that the implementation of the Paris Agreement is underway and the constructive spirit of multilateral cooperation on climate change continues.
According to UNFCCC, the Conference successfully demonstrated to the world that the implementation of the Paris Agreement is underway and the constructive spirit of multilateral cooperation on climate change continues.
Key Outcomes and
Initiatives of COP 22
Rule Book:
A crucial outcome of the Marrakech climate
conference was to move forward on writing the rule book, or operational manual,
of the Paris Agreement. Countries pressed forward on this and set a fast track
date of 2018 for completion
At COP 22, seven developing countries
presented updates and opened themselves to examination by their peers on how
they are moving to a low-carbon economy.
Capacity-building Initiative for Transparency
During COP 22, the Global Environment
Facility (GEF), a multilateral funding arm, announced a Capacity-building Initiative for Transparency backed by 11
developed country donors providing $50 million-worth of funding.
Progress by
Governments
Governments made progress across key areas of
climate action, including climate finance, adaptation, capacity building,
technology and gender-responsiveness. This is an overview:
Climate finance
- Countries pledged more than $81 million to the
Adaptation Fund, surpassing its target for the year.
- Countries pledged over $23 million
to the Climate Technology Centre and Network,
which supports developing countries with climate technology development
and transfer. As the implementation arm of the Technology Mechanism, the
CTCN is a key institution to enable nations realize their commitments
under the Paris Agreement.
- The Green Climate Fund (GCF) announced the approval of
the first two proposals for the formulation of National Adaptation Plans:
Liberia for $2.2 million and Nepal for $2.9 million. Another 20 countries
are expected to have their proposals approved soon with up to $3 million
each.
- Overall, the GCF is on track to approve $2.5 billion
worth of projects.
Capacity Building
- In another show of accelerated climate action,
countries operationalized the Paris Agreement’s Paris
Committee on Capacity Building. It will help build
capacity for climate action in developing countries. The members have been
elected and the committee will take up its work in May 2017.
Technology
- During COP 22, governments learned that in 2016 over 30
projects for cutting emissions with technology transfer objectives were
approved by the Global Environment Facility (GEF), with $188.7 million in
GEF funding and $5.9 billion in co-financing.
Global Climate Action
Further impressive announcements were made by
cities and sub-national governments to investors and business as part of the Global Climate Action (GCA). The Marrakech Partnership for Global Climate Action provides a strong
roadmap for how the UNFCCC process will catalyse and support climate action by
Parties and non-Party stakeholders in the period 2017 to 2020.
- The number of companies making climate commitments
through the We Mean Business
coalition has more than doubled since COP 21.
- At COP 22, the Indian company Dalmia Cement and
Helvetia insurance group committed to use 100% renewable power across
their operations and join RE100; the global,
collaborative initiative with more than 80 of the world’s most influential
companies.
- Cities, towns and regions are making big impacts in
implementing their climate commitments by acting locally and partnering
globally.
- A new assessment tool presented during the Resilience
Showcase will allow standardized qualitative reporting of adaptation
commitments to the Global Covenant of Mayors.
- The Energy Efficiency in Buildings Programme was
launched, designed to unlock funds for the improvement of energy
efficiency through better coordination, offering technical assistance and
financing transformational projects.
- The Government of Indonesia announced it is
implementing a moratorium on clearing super high-carbon, intact peatland.
The action builds on Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s announcement at
last year’s Forest Action Day in Paris, to end new and review existing
peat concessions.
- Colombia has announced plans to close the forest
frontier as a key component of a post-conflict future. Efforts include
focusing development on non-forest lands, implementing strong tenure
reform, and placing very large areas of forest under indigenous peoples’
control.
- The Water for Africa
initiative, established by the Kingdom of Morocco and supported by the
African Development Bank was launched at COP 22, aiming to render justice
to Africa through the adoption of a specific action plan that will
mobilize different international political, financial and institutional
partners.
- The Global
Fuel Economy Initiative (GFEI) is
supporting an additional 40 countries to realize the financial benefits
and CO2 benefits of improved vehicle fuel economy.
- COP 22 Ocean Action partners released the Strategic
Action Roadmap on Oceans and Climate: 2016 to 2021, which
provides a vision for action on oceans and climate in the next five years,
addressing six oceans.
- Launch of the
Global Framework on Water Scarcity
supports countries to integrate climate change and sustainable water use
into agricultural sectors policies and cross-sectoral dialogue.
- 130 mayors from cities across the world signed the Milan
Urban Food Policy Pact (MUFPP), which calls for
sustainable food systems that foster the accessibility of healthy food for
urban citizens, biodiversity protection and food waste reduction.
The new era of implementation and action for
climate and for sustainable development was captured in the Marrakech Action Proclamation, issues at the
end of COP 22. The next conference, COP 23, will be held in Bonn, Germany, in
November 2017.
This post relates
to Chapter 13 of the book and the content has been derived from www.unfccc.int.
Very good content for UPSC prelims. Thank you very much Sir..!!
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ReplyDeleteThank you sir
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