Amid hope and hype, delegates on Friday, April 22 started the process of signing the Paris climate agreement at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
Around 170 countries were expected to ink the deal, a record number for a new international treaty. Ten nations, mainly small island states, have already ratified the agreement.
But dozens of other countries will need to take this second step before the pact comes into force.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said: “Paris will shape the lives of all future generations a profound way – it is their future that is at stake.”
Speaking at the opening ceremony on Friday, he said the planet was experiencing record temperatures: “We are in a race against time I urge all countries to join the agreement at the national level.
“Today, we are signing a new covenant for the future.”
As the world marked the 46th Earth Day, UN climate chief, Christiana Figueres, explained what now needed to happen.
“Most countries, though not all, need to take the signed document and go back home and go to ratification procedures that in most countries requires parliamentary discussion and decision.
“The U.S. and China will come and sign and confirm from a formal point of view from the podium at the UN, that they will ratify and accede to the Paris agreement this year.”
Analysis
Only a few years ago the very idea of a global treaty to limit climate change seemed almost impossible. The ghosts of the failed Copenhagen summit in 2009 haunted the negotiations.
In a total transformation in morale, almost all of the world’s governments were in New York to support the new Paris Agreement. The sheer scale of the turnout was seen as a signal of political determination. The atmosphere is positive, up to a point. Tough challenges lie ahead.
One is the task of ratification, another the continuing arguments over cash, a third the basic fact that the deal was only made possible because each country’s actions are entirely voluntary. And then there’s the awkward truth that, amid the celebrations, all eyes are transfixed by events beyond the UN buildings.
Mention of the name Trump triggers nervous laughter. A Republican victory would presumably lead to America’s withdrawal from the agreement. And that would risk undermining the entire process.
Hollywood actor and climate change campaigner Leonardo DiCaprio said: “After 21 years of debates and conferences it’s times to declare no more talks, no more 10-year studies, no more allowing the fossil fuel companies to manipulate and dictate the science and the policies that affect our future. This is the body that can do what is needed.”
France’s president Francois Hollande said the agreement in Paris was an “emotional moment, rare in the lives of politicians and leaders”.
He added: “We need to go further than the pledges made there.”
Though the U.S. and China represent around 38 per cent of global emissions, getting to the 55 per cent figure will not be that easy.
The European Union (EU), which represents just under 10 per cent of global CO2, will take a considerable amount of time as each of the 28 members has to ratify it themselves.
That is unlikely to begin until the EU can agree how much of the carbon cutting each country will have to undertake.
Small island states were upset with this approach.
“That exercise is going to take too long. We should all join together and tell our friends in the EU they must move along more quickly than that,” said the Marshall Islands Ambassador for climate change, Tony De Brum.
“We did not expect that kind of distance in the process of ratification and approval.”
Indigenous rights campaigner Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim commented: “Climate change is adding poverty to poverty every day, forcing many to leave home for a better future.”
“If you do not increase finance for adaptation soon, there will be no one to adapt.”
President Barack Obama is also keen to see the new agreement take effect before he leaves office next January. A little known clause in the treaty means it would take four years if a new leader, less committed to climate action, wanted to take the U.S. out of the agreement.
Other countries are also aware of this and are watching the U.S. election process very closely.
“We don’t know who the next President will be and what stand the new administration will take,” India’s environment minister Prakash Javadekar told BBC News.
“What happens in the US will have a definite bearing how the world takes all these ideas and commitments and pledges in effect. So people are eagerly awaiting what happens in the U.S.”
China said it would ‘finalise domestic procedures” to ratify the Paris Agreement before the G20 summit in China in September.
There is obvious delight here in New York at the record turnout of countries and leaders to sign the agreement. But some attendees are cautioning that this is merely the first rung on a very difficult ladder.
If action to cut emissions isn’t ramped up quickly, and the world warms by significantly more than 2C, there would be consequences.
“If you have seen Syrian refugees, get ready to see climate refugees – it will be worse,” said Tosi Mpan-Mpanu from the DRC, the chairman of the Least Developed Countries group in the UN talks.
“If people have had decades of gaining assets and livelihoods which are completely depleted in season’s dry weather – what do they have left?”
“It is an open door to Boko Haram, it is an open door to Daesh, because people will be just desperate,” he told BBC News.
• Culled from BBC