BAN CALLS ON STATES TO ENSURE CLIMATE CHANGE DEAL HAS BROAD SUPPORT
Holding
out for a 'perfect' deal at next month's climate change summit in
Copenhagen could result in there being no agreement at all,
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned today, calling on all States to
get behind a deal that is as ambitious as possible but also has broad
international support.
In an address to the Commonwealth summit
meeting with small island developing States, held in Port of Spain,
Trinidad and Tobago, Mr. Ban told participants that given their
countries were on the frontline of the impact of climate change, it was
vital that their voices were heard to try to achieve "a strong,
equitable agreement" in the Danish capital.
"I know the cost of inaction far outweighs the costs of acting today," he said. "I commend your call for deep emissions cuts in line with the science. And I support your call for scaled-up resources for urgent adaptation needs as well as mitigation."
Without a deal at the summit, Mr.
Ban said greenhouse gas emissions would continue to rise and the impact
of climate change worldwide would become ever more severe.
A
deal "must be as ambitious as possible. But to get a deal we need every
country on board. We need you on board. The world needs your support at
this critical moment."
The United Nations Secretary-General said
he recognized the concerns of many small island developing States,
particularly about the need to set a long-term goal to keep global
temperature increases as low as possible.
"Many refer to a
2-degree limit while for you, the most vulnerable countries, a safe
level means staying below 1.5 degrees centigrade. That said, we face a
simple reality: if we delay for perfection, we risk ending up with
nothing -- no agreement at all."
Mr. Ban told participants that
momentum for a deal in Copenhagen, where at least 80 world leaders are
expected to attend, was strong and continuing to grow.
"The world has never before witnessed this level of political engagement on climate. We will not get a better chance any time soon."
He
emphasized that any deal reached in Copenhagen should deliver
"immediate, practical results," including the acceleration of financing
of at least $10 billion a year to strengthen resilience and support
mitigation measures against climate change in poorer and vulnerable
countries.
"A deal that will spur action on all key areas of
adaptation, mitigation, finance and governance. An ambitious deal that
will set a firm deadline for a legally binding treaty as soon as
possible in 2010. The stronger the agreement in Copenhagen, the quicker
it can be transformed into a legal framework."
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