UK GOVERNMENT SETS OUT MANIFESTO FOR GLOBAL CLIMATE DEAL: PRIME MINISTER PROPOSES $100 BN FINANCE BREAKTHROUGH
London, June 26, 2009 -- “This is a make or break time for our climate and our future”, UK Climate and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said today as the Government for the first time ever set out its detailed position ahead of global climate talks.
And making a keynote speech aimed at unblocking the most contentious
area of the talks, Prime Minister Gordon Brown broke new ground among
world leaders in setting out how the world should pay for avoiding
dangerous climate change and adapting to its impacts.
With less than six months left before crucial climate negotiations take
place in the Danish capital Copenhagen, the Government today sets out
for the first time why an international climate change agreement is
vital for the world and what a deal must contain. The UK argues the
global deal on climate change must be:
• Ambitious – limit climate change to 2 degrees, by making sure
global greenhouse gas emissions peak and start to reduce by 2020, and
keep on shrinking to reach at most half of their 1990 levels by 2050.
• Effective – keep all countries to their word with strong
monitoring, reporting and verification; and let money flow to where it
will make most difference by developing carbon markets
• Fair – support the poorest countries to cut their emissions and adapt to climate change.
Success in Copenhagen is also vital for Britain’s economic future and
national security. Building a low carbon Britain and securing a
Copenhagen deal will be in our business and economic interests. Over
800,000 people are now employed in the low carbon sector in the UK and
well over a million jobs are predicted by the middle of the next decade.
In his speech, the Prime Minister proposed a way forward for developed
and developing countries to agree new mechanisms to pay for tackling
climate change. He urged countries to work together on a global figure
of around $100 billion per year by 2020 to help developing countries
reduce their emissions, tackle deforestation and adapt to the climate
change already being experienced. He committed the UK to providing new
finance additional to existing Official Development Assistance
commitments.
Publishing ‘The Road to Copenhagen’, a manifesto for a global climate deal, Ed Miliband said:
“This is make or break time for our climate and our future. With less
than six months to go before crunch negotiations in Copenhagen, it’s
clear that there is no plan B for the planet.
“The world’s got no option but to work together to get a global climate deal that’s ambitious, effective and fair.
“Our climate manifesto puts the British public in the front and centre of our efforts to get a climate deal.
“For people in Britain, getting a global deal now will mean reducing
the risk of devastating future climate impacts and the huge extra costs
that would bring. But it will also open the door to big new
opportunities to create green jobs and economic prosperity.”
In advance of the G8 and Major Economies Summits in Italy next month,
Gordon Brown urged his fellow leaders to agree on a new financing
system to provide predictable and additional assistance to developing
countries. This would comprise investment flowing through a global
carbon market, new mechanisms to raise public finance and a limited
proportion of Official Development Assistance.
The funds would help developing countries to cut their emissions, use
greener technology and reduce deforestation, as well as helping the
poorest and most vulnerable countries cope with the effects of climate
change already now occurring.
The Prime Minister also proposed far-reaching delivery and
institutional arrangements to enhance developing countries’ voice in
how the money is spent and to enhance coordination between all the
institutions dealing with climate finance.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown told ambassadors, green groups and business organisations gathered in London:
"The UK is determined to secure an international agreement at
Copenhagen that puts the world on a path to avoiding dangerous climate
change. All countries have to take action, but to help developing
countries move to low-carbon and climate-resilient growth we will need
a new system of financial support for greener technology, deforestation
and adaptation. I hope the proposals I set out today can help move the
talks in that direction."
Douglas Alexander, the UK’s Development Secretary, added:
"Climate change is a development issue. It is the world’s poorest
people that are most vulnerable to the rising sea levels and extreme
weather that a changing climate will bring, and it is vital that our
work in tackling poverty reflects this.
"That is why funds are needed in addition to existing aid budgets, and
why the UK is leading the way in helping developing countries to both
prepare for the impact of climate change and build for a low-carbon
future."
As part of the countdown to Copenhagen, the Government today:
• Publishes and lays before Parliament ‘The Road to Copenhagen’, a
document setting out why a deal is so important and for the first time,
the details of what kind a deal the UK Government is pushing for.
• Distributes nearly 20,000 ‘Road to Copenhagen’ pamphlets, also
available online, out to schools, citizens advice centres and every
library explaining why a global deal is vital and giving 15 top tips on
what each of us can do to cut our carbon footprint as part of the
global effort.
• Launches www.actoncopenhagen.gov.uk – the official UK government
website presenting information on the climate change negotiations. It
will act as the domestic and international hub for information and
communications in the lead up to the UN talks in Copenhagen, 2009.
• Presents a new and improved Act on CO2 online carbon calculator
where people can log on and find out how to lower their carbon
footprint and save money at the save time –
http://actonco2.direct.gov.uk
Today’s announcement forms part of the Government’s 5-Point Plan to tackle climate change:
• protecting the public from immediate risk
• preparing for the future through adaptation
• pushing for an international agreement
• building a low carbon Britain
• helping everyone play their part.
It follows the UK Climate Projections published last week which showed
that if the world follows a high emissions path, by the 2080s
temperatures in Britain could be up to 12 degrees C warmer on the
hottest summer days and sea levels could rise by 36 cm.
Department of Energy and Climate Change
3 Whitehall Place, London, SW1A 2HD
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