THE historic global climate accord reached last December in Paris is moving rapidly toward enactment, with 60 countries—representing 48 percent of all greenhouse-gas emissions—having formally approved it as of Wednesday.
To become law, the accord must be approved by at least 55 nations, and those nations must collectively be responsible for at least 55 percent of the climate-altering emissions.
The United States and China, the world’s largest emitters, formally approved the agreement this month. Many small nations approved the accord in spring, and 31 other countries—including Brazil, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates—formally submitted their approval at a special ceremony at the United Nations on Wednesday.
US Secretary of State John F. Kerry, speaking at the ceremony, said he was “confident we will bring this agreement into force this year,” probably no later than the next international climate conference in November in Marrakech, Morroco. Most international agreements take several years to become law while they are approved by individual national governments. The blazing pace toward ratification of the climate accord reflects increasing concerns about climate change—2016 is on track to eclipse 2015 as the hottest year on record—but also political change.
Many world leaders and UN officials have expressed concern about the durability of the agreement if Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is elected in November. Although President Barack Obama has been a strong supporter of the accord and Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee, supports it, Trump has questioned climate science and said he would cancel the agreement if he is elected.
Patricia Espinosa, who leads the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, told ClimateWire this week that “everybody’s aware of that possibility and just concerned about it.”
The concern has prompted a strong push to complete approval—or ratification—before the end of Obama’s second term, which ends in January. If the accord became international law before a Trump administration were to take office, rules of the agreement would require at least four years to pass before the US could pursue withdrawing from it.
Even if a scenario like that unfolded, many experts believe domestic and international pressure would prevent the US from withdrawing.
As Espinosa told ClimateWire, “What would happen? What would be the reaction of the international community? What would be the reaction in the US, where today most US citizens believe climate change is real and something has to be done about it? It’s important that we’re aware that it would be a very, very complex situation.”
The chances of getting from the current 48 percent of emissions to the necessary 55 percent appeared promising on Wednesday.
At the UN ceremony, 14 more countries—including Austria, Australia, Cambodia, Canada, Costa Rica, Ivory Coast, Kazakhstan and South Korea—said they would approve the accord this year.
The European Commission also said it was prepared to approve it this year, though the approval process in the European Union is complicated by different protocols among its 28 nations. Those countries create about 12 percent of global emissions.
The goal of the accord is to hold the increase in global temperatures to less than 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, above preindustrial levels. That is a level scientists have said could avert the most damaging effects of climate change, though many scientists want the goal strengthened to 1.5 degrees. The accord includes provisions for that.
The commitments countries have outlined so far would meet neither of those goals, but the agreement has a rolling set of deadlines that are intended to spur countries to continually increase their goals.
“This momentum is remarkable,” UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Wednesday. “It can sometimes take years or even decades for a treaty to enter into force. It is just nine months since the Paris climate conference. This is testament to the urgency of the crisis we all face.”
Los Angeles Times/TNS
Image credits: AP /Richard Drew