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COP23: Much remains to be done

As COP23 draws to a close, it offers an opportunity to reflect on the progress made by the UNFCCC and its efforts to address the issue of climate change. This year represents a quarter of a century since the adoption of the Framework Convention and 20 years for the Kyoto Protocol, which was agreed at COP3 in December 1997.

In that time, global emissions have risen by over 50%, hardly a testament to thousands of hours of negotiation, millions of air-miles by COP attendees and many long nights as disagreement erupted. Further, after three years of global emissions seemingly at a plateau, the delegates at COP23 were reminded in stark terms that there is still everything to work for; 2017 emissions are likely to show a 2% rise over 2016. While large uncertainties in the final number remain, emissions in China appear to have risen by some 3.5% (but with arrange of 0.7% to 5.4%).

Although emissions are the truest test of success, bringing them down and ensuring stabilisation of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels was not going to be easy. Nevertheless, the UNFCCC process has persisted and resulted in a world that is slowly mobilizing around the need to act and in many instances is acting. Arguably the process has delivered on several fronts;

The above list is not meant to be comprehensive and it could also be argued that some of this is unrelated to the UNFCCC, but without a central focus the lens on climate change would be a very different one. Nevertheless, COP23 highlighted two key issues;

The political sensitivity of both these issues is heightened by the expected departure of the US from the Paris Agreement. It is unlikely that heroics from the US sub-national actors can compensate for that political destabilisation.

These and other issues will need to be resolved in the coming year if the full Paris ‘rule book’ is to be finalised by the end of COP24. In all likelihood, resolution will not be complete, but the process won’t falter either and the ongoing mobilization of global effort will continue. Negotiators will meet again in Bonn around the middle of the year and then in Katowice, Poland for COP24. In the case of the latter, the biggest fight is most likely to be over hotel rooms.

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