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Top UN officials call on member states to remain committed to Paris climate accord

Source: Xinhua   2017-03-24 06:07:14

UNITED NATIONS, March 23 (Xinhua) -- Climate change is an unprecedented and growing threat to peace, prosperity and development and addressing it presents an economic opportunity for governments and business, top UN officials said here Thursday, calling upon UN member states to remain committed to Paris climate accord.

The statement came at a time when U.S. President Donald Trump is reportedly poised in the coming days to announce his plans to dismantle the centerpiece of former President Barack Obama's climate change legacy, which includes his efforts to help bring the Paris Agreement into being in December 2015.

Trump's moves are intended to send an unmistakable signal to the nation and the world that he intends to follow through on his campaign vows to rip apart every element of what the current U.S. president has called Obama's "stupid" policies to deal with climate change.

"We are dealing with scientific facts, not politics. And the facts are clear. Climate change is a direct threat in itself, and a multiplier of many other threats," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said while addressing a UN General Assembly high-level action event aimed at invigorating political momentum on climate change, highlighting its deep links to the UN 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development.

Guterres said his messages to the meeting are simple.

"First, climate change is an unprecedented and growing threat -- to peace and prosperity and the same in relation to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)," a guideline for the global development efforts for the years running up to 2030, Guterres said. "Second, addressing climate change is a massive opportunity that we cannot afford to miss."

The Paris Agreement on climate change adopted in December 2015 is unique in its universality, with every single government having signed it. The pact entered force in less than a year. To date more than 130 Parties have ratified it, and the numbers are growing monthly.

The countries that supported the Paris Agreement are the same that adopted the 2030 Agenda -- they comprise all the 193 UN member states.

The reason for this consensus is clear: all nations recognize that implementing the 2030 Agenda goes hand-in-glove with limiting global temperature rise and increasing climate resilience.

Guterres said that last year was once again the hottest on record. Sea ice is at a historic low and sea levels at a historic high. These trends are indisputable, he stressed, explaining that consequences of climate change include food insecurity, water scarcity, poverty and displacement.

Tackling climate change is a tremendous opportunity for governments and business as there is no trade-off between a healthy environment and a healthy economy.

"We can have both. Green business is good business," he said.

"How we go about it can be the subject of scientific and political debate. But there is no question that we must act, urgently and decisively, now," Guterres said. "And it remains the only viable way to safeguard peace, prosperity and a sustainable future."

Also addressing the event were Peter Thomson, the president of the General Assembly, and Patricia Espinosa, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Thomson said that he had recently met with Petteri Taalas, the secretary-general of the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO), who confirmed that the world is currently on track towards a 3-to-4 Celsius-degree increase in global temperatures.

"I have always understood ... that once we reach the 3°C - 4°C range, humanity's survival on this planet will be put in jeopardy," the president said.

Cyclone Winston and Cyclone Pam which devastated Fiji and Vanuatu in recent years were among the strongest tropical cyclones to ever make landfall in the Southern Hemisphere. Fiji, an island nation where Thomson is from, has already begun relocating low-lying villages to higher ground, away from the encroaching shoreline and the rising threat of storm surges.

"While the prognosis is dire, the scientific community assures us it is possible to bend the curve on current trajectories, if we work together to curb the growth of global greenhouse gas emissions," Thomson said, reiterating his call for all parties to the Paris Agreement to ratify it without delay and for those that have already done so to deliver on their commitments.

Echoing the president's statement, Espinosa said that it is a necessity to bend the emissions curve, build societies resilient to climate impacts and reduce risk by limiting warming to safe levels.

"And the policies that accomplish these goals must be developed with a focus on the sustained wellbeing of people, sound stewardship of the planet and responsible economic growth," she said, noting that such a transformation opens the door to a future where growing human needs are reconciled against the need for a stable climate and healthy ecosystems.

"This challenge is immense. Inaction or insufficient action will destabilize the natural systems that underpin all social and economic development," she said, urging concerted effort to overcome this challenge.

"We have truly entered the era of implementation," she said. "It is up to us, collectively as one community of nations, to accelerate action that builds a better future for all."

Editor: Mu Xuequan
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Top UN officials call on member states to remain committed to Paris climate accord

Source: Xinhua 2017-03-24 06:07:14
[Editor: huaxia]

UNITED NATIONS, March 23 (Xinhua) -- Climate change is an unprecedented and growing threat to peace, prosperity and development and addressing it presents an economic opportunity for governments and business, top UN officials said here Thursday, calling upon UN member states to remain committed to Paris climate accord.

The statement came at a time when U.S. President Donald Trump is reportedly poised in the coming days to announce his plans to dismantle the centerpiece of former President Barack Obama's climate change legacy, which includes his efforts to help bring the Paris Agreement into being in December 2015.

Trump's moves are intended to send an unmistakable signal to the nation and the world that he intends to follow through on his campaign vows to rip apart every element of what the current U.S. president has called Obama's "stupid" policies to deal with climate change.

"We are dealing with scientific facts, not politics. And the facts are clear. Climate change is a direct threat in itself, and a multiplier of many other threats," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said while addressing a UN General Assembly high-level action event aimed at invigorating political momentum on climate change, highlighting its deep links to the UN 2030 Agenda on Sustainable Development.

Guterres said his messages to the meeting are simple.

"First, climate change is an unprecedented and growing threat -- to peace and prosperity and the same in relation to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)," a guideline for the global development efforts for the years running up to 2030, Guterres said. "Second, addressing climate change is a massive opportunity that we cannot afford to miss."

The Paris Agreement on climate change adopted in December 2015 is unique in its universality, with every single government having signed it. The pact entered force in less than a year. To date more than 130 Parties have ratified it, and the numbers are growing monthly.

The countries that supported the Paris Agreement are the same that adopted the 2030 Agenda -- they comprise all the 193 UN member states.

The reason for this consensus is clear: all nations recognize that implementing the 2030 Agenda goes hand-in-glove with limiting global temperature rise and increasing climate resilience.

Guterres said that last year was once again the hottest on record. Sea ice is at a historic low and sea levels at a historic high. These trends are indisputable, he stressed, explaining that consequences of climate change include food insecurity, water scarcity, poverty and displacement.

Tackling climate change is a tremendous opportunity for governments and business as there is no trade-off between a healthy environment and a healthy economy.

"We can have both. Green business is good business," he said.

"How we go about it can be the subject of scientific and political debate. But there is no question that we must act, urgently and decisively, now," Guterres said. "And it remains the only viable way to safeguard peace, prosperity and a sustainable future."

Also addressing the event were Peter Thomson, the president of the General Assembly, and Patricia Espinosa, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Thomson said that he had recently met with Petteri Taalas, the secretary-general of the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO), who confirmed that the world is currently on track towards a 3-to-4 Celsius-degree increase in global temperatures.

"I have always understood ... that once we reach the 3°C - 4°C range, humanity's survival on this planet will be put in jeopardy," the president said.

Cyclone Winston and Cyclone Pam which devastated Fiji and Vanuatu in recent years were among the strongest tropical cyclones to ever make landfall in the Southern Hemisphere. Fiji, an island nation where Thomson is from, has already begun relocating low-lying villages to higher ground, away from the encroaching shoreline and the rising threat of storm surges.

"While the prognosis is dire, the scientific community assures us it is possible to bend the curve on current trajectories, if we work together to curb the growth of global greenhouse gas emissions," Thomson said, reiterating his call for all parties to the Paris Agreement to ratify it without delay and for those that have already done so to deliver on their commitments.

Echoing the president's statement, Espinosa said that it is a necessity to bend the emissions curve, build societies resilient to climate impacts and reduce risk by limiting warming to safe levels.

"And the policies that accomplish these goals must be developed with a focus on the sustained wellbeing of people, sound stewardship of the planet and responsible economic growth," she said, noting that such a transformation opens the door to a future where growing human needs are reconciled against the need for a stable climate and healthy ecosystems.

"This challenge is immense. Inaction or insufficient action will destabilize the natural systems that underpin all social and economic development," she said, urging concerted effort to overcome this challenge.

"We have truly entered the era of implementation," she said. "It is up to us, collectively as one community of nations, to accelerate action that builds a better future for all."

[Editor: huaxia]
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