Cities sign climate pledge in boost to global deal | Inquirer News

Cities sign climate pledge in boost to global deal

/ 08:08 AM September 25, 2015

PNG-PACIFIC-SUMMIT-CLIMATE

A group photo of the Pacific Island Forum (PIF) leaders shows (L-R) Niue Premier, Toke Talagi, Marshall Islands President, Christopher Loeak, Samoan Prime Minister, Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi, New Zealand Prime Minister, John Key, Tonga Prime Minister, Akilisi Pohiva, Solomon Islands Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare, Australia Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, Papua New Guinea Prime Minister, Peter O’Neill, Kiribati President, Anote Tong, Tuvalu Prime Minister, Enele Sopoaga, Vanuatu Prime Minister, Sato Kilman, Palau President, Tommy Remengesau, Nauru President, Baron Waqa, Fiji Minister for Foreign Affairs, Ratu Inoke Kubuabola, Cook Islands Prime Minister, Henry Puna and Micronesia President, Peter Christian posing for a group photo on the last day of the 46th Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) in Port Moresby on September 10, 2015. The 16-nation grouping consists mainly of small island nations, together with Australia and New Zealand, with the two developed nations being accused of dragging their feet on climate change. AFP PHOTO

NEW YORK, United States—Leading cities and regions on Thursday promised ambitious cuts to emissions blamed for climate change, hoping to boost efforts for a global deal.

READ: Fight vs climate change: French embassy launches ‘Road to Paris’

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The commitment was the latest in a series of pledges during a week of climate events in New York aimed at building momentum for a year-end conference in Paris that seeks to draft a landmark UN agreement.

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California, which is by far the most populous US state, has promised ambitious action on climate change despite political deadlock in the US Congress.

The state has spearheaded the initiative among sub-national governments to commit to keeping temperature rises to no more than two degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels, a United Nations-endorsed threshold to avoid the worst consequences of climate change.

National pledges ahead of the Paris conference are so far on track to leave temperature rises at 3 degrees Celsius, according to UN officials.

Mexico City, New York, San Francisco, Vancouver and the regions around Kathmandu and Manchester, England, were among the new signatories to the “Under 2 MOU” agreement launched last year, whose existing participants include Los Angeles.

While designed as a regional movement, three countries also joined the declaration—Italy, Luxembourg and The Netherlands.

California Governor Jerry Brown vowed that “no opposition, however well-financed” would stop his state from meeting its climate goals.

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“The politics of the future is to create the conditions of a livable, sustainable home,” Brown, quoting Pope Francis on climate change, told a signing ceremony at The New School in New York.

With the pledges, 38 jurisdictions that cover $8.7 trillion in GDP have now signed the declaration, larger than any country except the United States and China, according to Brown’s office.

The signatories promise, although without binding penalties, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80 to 95 percent from 1990 levels by 2050.

Jeffrey Sachs, a prominent economist and UN adviser on development, said that cities and regions played a critical role in fighting climate change by making decisions on critical issues including infrastructure and building codes.

“I think the US is the perfect case—a country where politics at the national level have been log-jammed for two decades but a tremendous amount is happening at the local and state level,” he told AFP.

“And what is actually happening is also becoming a model for national and international policy.”

Still, the UN conference in Paris will rely on commitments by national governments that have proven elusive in previous negotiating rounds.

Scientists say that the planet must check temperature rises at two degrees Celsius or lower to avoid the worst consequences of climate change including a growing number of droughts and disasters.

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