EUROPEAN FUNDING NEWS ON EU GRANTS & FUNDS FROM THE EUROPEAN UNION INFORMATION ON EU FUNDING GRANTS PROGRAMMES TO BENEFIT FROM FUNDS OR LOANS AVAILABLE BY EUROPEAN UNION
welcomeurope

Receive our Newsletter

Find more details on 450 European funding updated 2007-2013, training sessions on European funding, assistance in European project and project management. Find more details on 450 European funding updated 2007-2013, training sessions on European funding, assistance in European project and project management.

Home > EU Funding news
Search on Welcomeurope
Access to European funds
The latest Funding Alerts
Calls for European public procurements
  
PARTNERS
Europe's world
Robert Schuman
LINKS
   ONG/AJRD
   arthur job network
   RELATIO
   CIDH
   European Documentation Center
   The Brussels Connection
   Centro Giacomo Puccini
   All the links
  Link your site here
Eurofunding-zine Print this News
Add to my Portfolio January 28th, 2009

A new global pact on climate change
 European funds

Related EU Grant Loans Programme(s):
 Recommendations to develop a strategy to implement the Kyoto protocol in the EU
The next conference of the United Nations is based on the climatic change. The Commission suggested the conclusion of a new pact, in which the industrialized countries and the multilateral institutions grant a bigger financial support to the developing countries. The new international agreement will take place in Copenhague.

The European Commission today set out its proposals for a comprehensive and ambitious new global agreement to tackle climate change and how it could be financed. The new pact is due to be concluded at the Copenhagen UN climate conference in December. In order to keep temperature increase below 2°C, developing countries will require substantially higher funding from the developed world and multilateral institutions to help them shoulder their contribution to addressing climate change. The Commission’s proposals include the creation of an OECD-wide carbon market by 2015 and of innovative international funding sources based on countries' emissions and ability to pay.

Copenhagen goal

The EU’s goal is to limit global warming to less than 2°C above the pre-industrial temperature as there is strong scientific evidence that climate change will become dangerous beyond this point.

The Copenhagen deal should both set global goals to reduce emissions and provide the basis for strengthening countries’ ability to adapt to climate change. The Communication[1] offers concrete proposals to reach these goals.

Targets and actions

To stay below 2°C, global emissions need to peak before 2020 and then be cut to less than 50% of 1990 levels by 2050. This will require action by both developed and developing countries.

Developed countries must take the lead and cut their collective emissions by 30% of 1990 levels by 2020. The EU has set an example by committing to reduce emissions by 30% if other developed countries commit to comparable cuts and has already put in place the measures to cut its own emissions by 20% (IP/08/1998). The Communication proposes specific parameters to ensure national targets entail a comparable level of effort. All OECD countries and EU Member States, EU candidate countries and potential candidates should take on emission targets.

Developing countries, except the poorest ones, should limit growth in their collective emissions to 15-30% below business as usual levels by 2020. This should include a rapid decrease in emissions from tropical deforestation (IP/08/1543). These countries should commit to adopting low-carbon development strategies covering all key emitting sectors by 2011. A new international mechanism will assess these strategies and match proposed actions with appropriate external support.

Financing low-carbon development

To reduce emissions, global net additional investment may need to rise to around €175 billion per year in 2020 according to independent estimates. More than half of this will be needed in developing countries. Up to 2020 the bulk of actions in these countries will have low costs - or even benefits - and should be financed domestically. International financial support for actions exceeding a country’s domestic capabilities should come from sources including public funds and international carbon crediting mechanisms.

The Copenhagen agreement should also provide a framework to help countries adapt to inevitable climate change. All developed and developing countries should be required to elaborate national adaptation strategies. Support for adaptation should be provided to the most vulnerable Least Developed Countries and small island developing states.

The EU should explore potential innovative sources of international funding based on the polluter pays principle and the ability to pay. EU Member States could also use part of their future revenues from auctioning allowances under the EU Emissions Trading System to support developing countries.

Global carbon market

The EU should seek to build, by 2015, an OECD-wide carbon market by linking the EU ETS with other comparable cap-and-trade systems in order to mitigate and to raise funds to fight climate change. The market should be expanded to include major emerging economies by 2020 with a view to building a global carbon market.

The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism should be reformed. For advanced developing countries and highly competitive economic sectors, the CDM should be gradually replaced by a sectoral crediting mechanism and cap-and-trade systems.

Next steps

The Communication is addressed to the Council, Parliament and EU consultative bodies. The European Council is expected to give its response in March.
Source:
European Commission - Press room
More information:
DG Environment
Site map |  Contact us |  About us |  Links |  Recommanded sites
 
WELCOMEUROPE, 38 rue Leon - F - 75018 Paris | Tel : 33+1 42 54 60 64 / Fax : 33+1 42 54 70 04
WELCOMEUROPE © 2000-2010 - All rights reserved - Disclaimer