United Nations climate chief Christiana Figueres Thursday warned that a string of weather calamities showed the deepening urgency to forge a breakthrough deal on global warming this year.
United Nations climate chief Christiana Figueres Thursday warned that a
string of weather calamities showed the deepening urgency to forge a
breakthrough deal on global warming this year.
Speaking before 40 countries were to address finance, an issue that has helped
hamstring U.N. climate talks, Figueres said floods in
Pakistan
,
fires in
Russia
and
other weather disasters had been a shocking wakeup call.
"The news has been screaming that a future of intense, global climate
disasters is not the future that we want," Figueres, newly appointed
executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, told
reporters.
"Science will show whether and how those events are related to climate
change caused by humanity's greenhouse-gas emissions, but the point is clear:
We cannot afford to face escalating disasters of that kind."
Figueres called on governments to agree on "four or five" major
planks at year-end UNFCCC talks in Cancun, Mexico, which would then serve as a
platform for a 2012 global pact on climate.
"We read it that countries are assuming their responsibility, that they're
being realistic, that they're being productive, that they're being constructive
and that they're counting on very clear outcomes from
Cancun
,"
she said.
One of the issues in
Cancun
will be funding.
Hundreds of billions of dollars are needed to prevent future emissions of
greenhouse gases by emerging economies and help poor countries facing worsening
drought, flood, storms and rising seas.
The
Geneva
talks, running until Friday, gather more than 40 countries at ministerial
level, including big advanced economies, emerging giants and countries
representative of poor nations.
The tentative goal is to establish a "dialogue" on the broad lines of
how to gear up as much as 100 billion dollars a years by 2020.
The many questions include the resources of this fund, the role of the private
and public sector and how the money would be administered.
Also on the table will be how to implement "fast-track" finance of
$30 billion over the next three years.
Both are the key pledges made by rich countries at the U.N. climate summit in
Copenhagen
last
December, an event that bickering, textual wrangling and finger-pointing
brought to within an inch of catastrophe.
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