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Paris agreement: World eyes 55-55 ‘double threshold’ for climate deal to take effect

Paris agreement: World eyes 55-55 ‘double threshold’ for climate deal to take effect
21 April 2016

The text of the historic global agreement thrashed out at the COP 21 UN climate talks in Paris last December opens for signature by states at a ceremony convened Friday by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in New York.

The UN said Monday “up to 155” countries will be represented at the signing ceremony, expected to include COP 21 host President Hollande of France and UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres. (Update: UNFCCC Thursday tweets that nearly 170 countries intend to sign.)

It marks “an important international push on the way to the agreement’s timely entry into force,” in the words of a statement earlier this month by the Bonn-based secretariat of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

“A country’s signature on the agreement initiates the critical domestic process, on which depends its final entry into force,” the UNFCCC statement added.

“This process takes many separate forms and can be rapid or lengthier, depending on each country’s domestic practices.

“The outcome may be countries’ instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.”

Legal instruments

The Chief of the Treaty Section of the UN Office of Legal Affairs, Santiago Villalpando explained that the New York event was not the last opportunity for states to sign: “The Paris agreement will remain open for one year until 21 April 2017.”

On what has to happen for the agreement to take effect, Villalpando said that after the signing a “double threshold” must be crossed: “The first [part] is that we need 55 ratifications, acceptances or approvals for the agreement to enter into force, [and] they need to come from states that represent 55 per cent of total greenhouse gas emissions.”

The agreement would then enter into force on the 30th day after this point, and states had actually deposited legal instruments with the UN; it was possible this could happen over the coming year, well ahead of the original intended start date in 2020.

UNFCCC legal specialists have released a detailed information note on the mechanics of implementation of the Paris agreement.

The agreement was described last year by Garry Conille, IFRC Under-Secretary General for Programmes and Operations, as a “critical milestone that shows an appropriate balance between climate change mitigation and adaptation.

“This agreement will need to be implemented with a view to placing the interests of the most vulnerable at its core.

“We need to invest in their resilience, help them to adapt to the inevitable impacts of climate change, and forestall future crises by promoting ambitious emissions reductions.”

‘Momentum’

Speaking in New York this week, Climate Centre Director Maarten van Aalst said there was “an important element of symbolism in the signing ceremony, but it has to grow into much more than just that.

“One critical element of the Paris agreement was the focus on ambitious climate action to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and build resilience in the face of rising risks.

“This is why the IFRC is pledging its own One Billion Coalition for Resilience to the Paris process, as well as embracing the UN Secretary-General’s ‘Anticipate, Absorb, Reshape’ initiative to build resilience, especially for those in vulnerable coastal areas or facing droughts and floods.

“The Paris agreement is ambitious and implementation is not yet beyond doubt – we need to keep up the momentum even after this timely event in New York.

“And while these signatures are critical, we don’t have to wait to actually see all of them on paper – we can and must start acting on the global commitments without delay.”

This will be highlighted in Washington, DC shortly at Climate Action 2016 – another high-level event convened by Mr Ban, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim and others.

Red Cross Red Crescent programmes like Partners for Resilience and BRACED, meanwhile, are linking local solutions to aspirations embedded in the Paris agreement, while forecast-based financing is bridging the climate and humanitarian sectors in countries as far apart as BangladeshPeru and Uganda.

Several campaigns are now running on social media to support ratification of the #ParisAgreement, especially #Sign4Climate.

And in recognition of the link between climate and trees, the UNFCCC is calling on people all over the world to plant, hug, draw or photograph a tree through Friday and beyond to show support and solidarity with Paris.

Trees mean safety in Umauta, on Flores island, Indonesia, where this little boy lives and where an increasing area of unstable sloping land above the village is being cleared for cultivation, posing a landslide risk aggravated by rain. The whole village is now exposed to landslides, but some slopes were replanted as part of a Netherlands Red Cross risk-reduction programme to address climate impacts in Indonesia. (Library photo: Alex Wynter/NLRC)