COP27 Presidency vision based on human needs
The United Nations Climate Change Conference COP27 opened
today with the key aim of ensuring full implementation of the Paris Agreement.
Discussions at COP27 begin near the end of a year that
has seen devastating floods and unprecedented heat waves, severe droughts and
formidable storms, all unequivocal signs of the unfolding climate emergency. At
the same time, millions of people throughout the world are confronting the
impacts of simultaneous crises in energy, food, water and cost of living,
aggravated by severe geopolitical conflicts and tensions. In this adverse
context, some countries have begun to stall or reverse climate policies and doubled
down on fossil fuel use.
COP27 is also taking place against the backdrop of
inadequate ambition to curb greenhouse gas emissions. According to the UN’s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, CO2 emissions need to be cut 45% by
2030, compared to 2010 levels to meet the central Paris Agreement goal of
limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of this century.
This is crucial to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, including more
frequent and severe droughts, heatwaves and rainfall.
A report published by UN Climate Change ahead of COP27
shows that whilst countries are bending the curve of global greenhouse gas
emissions downward, efforts remain insufficient to limit global temperature
rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.
Since COP26 in Glasgow, only 29 out of 194 countries came
forward with tightened national plans.
“With the Paris Rulebook essentially concluded thanks to
COP26 in Glasgow last year, the litmus test of this and every future COP is how
far deliberations are accompanied by action. Everybody, every single day,
everywhere in the world, needs to do everything they possibly can to avert the
climate crisis,” said UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell.
“COP27 sets out a new direction for a new era of implementation: where outcomes
from the formal and informal process truly begin to come together to drive
greater climate progress — and accountability for that progress,” Mr. Stiell
said.
In his opening address, the UN Climate Change Executive
Secretary asked governments to focus on three critical areas at COP27. The
first is a transformational shift to implementation of the Paris Agreement and
putting negotiations into concrete actions.
The second is cementing progress on the critical workstreams
of mitigation, adaptation, finance and loss and damage, while stepping up
finance notably to tackle the impacts of climate change.
The third is enhancing the delivery of the principles of
transparency and accountability throughout the UN Climate Change process.
The Egyptian COP27 Presidency has set out an ambitious
vision for this COP that puts human needs at the heart of our global efforts to
address climate change. The Presidency intends to focus the world’s attention
on key elements that address some of the most fundamental needs of people
everywhere, including water security, food security, health and energy
security.
Sameh Shoukry, Egyptian Minister of Foreign Affairs and
COP27 President said: “We’re gathering this year at a time when global climate
action is at a watershed moment. Multilateralism is being challenged by
geopolitics, spiraling prices, and growing financial crises, while several
countries battered by the pandemic have barely recovered, and severe and
depleting climate change-induced disasters are becoming more frequent.
COP27 creates a unique opportunity in 2022 for the world
to unite, to make multilateralism work by restoring trust and coming together
at the highest levels to increase our ambition and action in fighting climate
change. COP27 must be remembered as the ‘Implementation COP’ – the one where we
restore the grand bargain that is at the centre of the Paris Agreement.”
Following a procedural opening on Sunday, 6 November, to
enable work to begin quickly, Monday and Tuesday will be the World Leaders
Summit with the presence of Royalty and more than 100 Heads of State or
Government.
The World Leaders Summit provides all Heads of State or
Government with the opportunity to set the stage for COP27. The two days will
include the Sharm el-Sheikh Climate Implementation Summit and will feature
important High-Level Side Events.
A number of key Ministerial and other events around
current climate change efforts will take place during the COP. These include a
first ministerial round table on pre-2030 ambition and continued discussions on
the global stocktake – a process for countries and stakeholders to see where
they’re collectively making progress towards meeting the goals of the Paris
Agreement — and where they’re not.
These discussions got underway at the Bonn Climate Change
Conference in June 2022 and will pick up where they left off at COP27.
Together, all events provide Ministers and participants
with a space to have frank and open discussions on progress made to date.
A High-Level Segment mostly attended by Ministers will
take place in the second week of the COP, from 15-18 November.
Climate Action undertaken by a diversity of stakeholders
working to support the implementation of the Paris Agreement will be showcased
throughout COP27.
The COP27 Presidency will host a series of events in
thematic days from 9-17 November which will highlight practical solutions to
the challenge of climate change and explore approaches to immediately scale up
the implementation of these solutions in key sectors with all stakeholders.