UN climate change deal in Peru 'weak' and 'ineffectual'
The UN climate deal agreed between nearly 200 countries in the early
hours of Sunday morning was welcomed by politicians - but
environmentalists and climate activists denounced it as both weak and
ineffectual.
Differences over the draft text caused the two-week talks in Lima,
Peru to overrun by more than a day before a compromise was finally
struck.
For the first time, developing and developed nations have all signed
up to publishing their national plans for curbing carbon dioxide
emissions, although the measures are still hazy and largely voluntary.

Nations sign up to publish national plans for curbing carbon
dioxide emissions |
Ed Davey, the Energy and Climate Change Secretary, hailed the
agreement as critical for next year's "even more difficult" climate
change summit in Paris. This will set out to establish binding
international commitments on reducing greenhouse gases to limit global
warming to the target threshold of 2C.
"The Lima deal unlocks the door to the big climate change deal that
we need in Paris next year. It's been tough and we've stayed up all
night to reach this deal, but we have to do it for our children and our
grandchildren," Mr Davey said.
Labour's Caroline Flint, the shadow Climate Change Secretary, said
that it was vital to get both developing and developed nations "on the
same page" and agree that they both need to tackle their carbon
emissions.
The two-week negotiations in Lima almost collapsed over disagreements
between rich and poor nations on who will pay for the poorer nations to
adapt to climate change, given that the problem is one largely made by
the richer industrialised countries.
"We've got what we wanted," said India's Minister for Environment and
Climate Change, Prakash Javadekar, who said the text of the Lima
agreement preserved a notion enshrined in a 1992 UN Climate Convention
that the rich have to lead the way in making cuts in greenhouse-gas
emissions.
The US, meanwhile, was among wealthier nations that wanted firmer
commitments on limiting carbon emissions from fast-growing economies
such as India and China. China is now the biggest emitter of greenhouse
gases, ahead of the US, the EU and India.
The US Special Envoy for Climate Change, Todd Stern, said that a
joint US-China deal last month to curb emissions had helped show new
ways to bridge a standoff between rich and poor. "The announcement of a
few weeks ago came in handy here," Stern said.
However, other attendees at the Lima talks were less happy with the
final deal, arguing that it was weak and ineffectual, and makes a deal
in Paris even more difficult to reach.
"Governments crucially failed to agree on specific plans to cut
emissions before 2020 that would have laid the ground for ending the
fossil fuel era and accelerated the move towards renewable energy and
increased energy efficiency," said Samantha Smith of the WWF's global
climate initiative.
Lord Stern, chair of the Grantham Research Institute in London, said
the Lima deal is an important step towards a new agreement at the
climate change summit in Paris next December, but a number of important
issues still need to be resolved before then.
"It is vital that countries put before the Paris summit intended
nationally determined contributions that are both ambitious and
credible," Lord Stern said.
"That means countries must continue to explore opportunities to
increase emissions cuts. And they must build into the Paris agreement
arrangements for moving purposefully thereafter to increase the scale of
action," he said.
What is the Lima deal about?
It is an attempt to lay down the ground rules for a crucial climate
change summit in Paris next year.
This summit is seen as critical for the international attempts to
curb the growing concentrations of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse
gases in the atmosphere.
The ultimate aim is to try to reduce emissions to a level that
scientists think will keep the world within the 2C upper target, which
they see as a threshold for potentially dangerous climate change.
Does the deal affect anything?
For the first time is brings together both the richer industrialised
countries and the poorer developing nations, which have agreed to
publish national plans for reigning in their greenhouse gas emissions.
The informal deadline for completing this is 31 March 2015, which they
hope will give them time to formulate a global agreement for the Paris
summit next December.
Didn't we have a Kyoto climate deal already?
The Kyoto protocol came out of the 1992 UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change, the same convention that has led to the Lima deal and
Paris summit next year.
- The Independent
|