Experts
Prepare for UN Conference on Global Warming
News
Blaze
One
thousand representatives from governments, business and industry, environmental
organizations and research institutions will gather in Vienna at the end of this
month to set the stage for a major United Nations conference in December on further
reducing the greenhouse gases from human activity blamed for global warming.
The
conference in Bali, Indonesia, from 3 to 14 December seeks to determining future
action on mitigation, adaptation, the global carbon market and financing responses
to climate change for the period after the expiry of the Kyoto Protocol. That
pact, appended to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (<"http://unfccc.int/2860.php">UNFCCC),
contains legally binding emission reduction targets through 2012.
"The
discussions in Vienna on possible future emission reduction commitments for industrialized
countries, and on strengthened implementation of the UNFCCC, can form the main
building blocks of a new climate change regime," UNFCCC Executive Secretary
Yvo de Boer said.
"What
I then hope Bali will agree on is a negotiating agenda over the next two years
that will craft an effective, long-term post-2012 regime."
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon, who will convene a high-level meeting on the issue in New York on
24 September, has <"http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=23353&Cr=Climate&Cr1=change">said
a successor to the Kyoto Protocol must be ready for ratification three years before
2012 to allow time for countries to ratify it.
The
Vienna meeting from 27 to 31 August - the fourth 'Workshop under the Dialogue
on long-term cooperative action to address climate change by enhancing implementation
of the Convention and the fourth 'Session of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Further
Commitments - involves all 191 Parties to the UNFCCC.
The
UNFCCC secretariat will present results from the analysis of existing and planned
investment flows and finance schemes relevant to the development of effective
and appropriate international response to climate change.
"This
analysis is significant because traditional investment needs to be redirected
to more climate-friendly and climate-proof alternatives. Failure to achieve changes
in investment and financial flows for mitigation will lead to higher emissions,
more climate change impacts and larger financial needs for adaptation in the future,"
Mr. de Boer said.
The
latest meetings follow a series of UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(<"http://www.ipcc.ch/">IPCC) reports showing unequivocal evidence
that world is warming, almost certainly due to human activity, with potentially
disastrous effects including more extreme temperatures, new wind patterns, worsening
drought in some regions and heavier rainfall in others, melting glaciers and Arctic
ice, and rising global average sea levels.