China announced on Saturday Sep 03,2016 that it has ratified the
emissions—cutting agreement reached last year in Paris, giving a big
boost to efforts to bring the accord into effect by the end of this
year.
The United States was also expected to
announce that it was formally joining the Paris Agreement in advance of
the Group of 20 summit that starts on Sunday in China.
While
tensions have risen between Beijing and Washington during President
Barack Obama’s term over issues including cyber hacking, the South China
Sea and the planned deployment of a U.S. anti-missile system in China’s
neighbour South Korea, combating climate change is one area where both
countries have stressed they can work together.
Together,
the two countries produce 38 percent of the world’s man-made carbon
dioxide emissions. Both were key to getting an agreement in Paris last
year.
To build momentum for a deal, they set a 2030 deadline for
emissions to stop rising and announced their “shared conviction that
climate change is one of the greatest threats facing humanity.”
China
had said in April that it would ratify the Paris Agreement, negotiated
by representatives of 195 nations in Paris last year, before its hosting
of the G20 summit.
The agreement goes into force when joined by at
least 55 nations that produce a total of 55 per cent of global
emissions.
Together, China and the U.S. together produce 38 %
Li
Shuo, senior climate policy adviser for the environmental group
Greenpeace, said on Saturday that the two countries acting on the
agreement was “a very important next step.”
If the
agreement is eventually adopted, he said, “we’ll have a truly global
climate agreement that will bind the two biggest emitters in the world.”
Before China’s announcement, 23 countries had
ratified or otherwise joined the agreement, representing just 1 percent
of global emissions, according to the World Resources Institute.
The
agreement’s long-term goal is to keep global warming below 2 degrees
Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), compared with pre-industrial times. It
has an aspirational goal of limiting the temperature rise to 1.5
degrees C (2.7 degrees F). Temperatures have already risen by almost 1
degree C (1.8 degrees F) since the industrial revolution.
Under
the Paris Agreement, countries are required to set national targets for
reducing or reining in their greenhouse gas emissions.
Those targets
aren’t legally binding, but countries must report on their progress and
update their targets every five years.
The first cycle begins in 2020.
Only developed countries are expected to slash their emissions in
absolute terms.
Developing nations are “encouraged” to do so as their
capabilities evolve over time.
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