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Cancún breaks the ground for new dynamics to combat climate change

Germanwatch welcomes surprisingly positive agreement at the climate summit

Press release

Cancun, 11.12.2010: The climate summit in Cancún agreed on important  climate protection packages after a dramatic night session, partly  thanks to the sovereign leadership of the Mexican Foreign Minister  Patricia Espinosa. Agreed packages include the protection of rain  forests, adaptation to climate change for the most vulnerable countries,  technology transfer and a Green Fund for financing the above mentioned  measures. For the first time in UN history it was officially accepted by  all countries to limit the global temperature rise below two degrees  Celsius. The insufficient voluntarily delivered numbers of Copenhagen to  reduce the emissions of the industrialised countries would lead towards  a temperature increase of three to four degrees Celsius until the end of  the century. It was now decided that those reduction targets shall be  scaled up until 2015 to close the gap for staying below the two degrees  limit.

"It was demonstrated in Cancún, that the UNFCCC process is able to reach  groundbreaking achievements. Those will be the foundations for next  year's summit in South Africa. Long term financing of climate protection  and rain forest protection as well as adaptation will be main issues to  discuss, along with a legally binding agreement", explains Klaus Milke,  Chairman of the Board at Germanwatch. "In addition, we have seen though  that the consensus-based process within the UN alone will not be able to  channel the necessary dynamic in international climate politics with a  US administration more or less incapable of action. Further dynamics  have to be reached through additional frontrunner coalitions among  countries, communities and businesses", adds Christoph Bals, Political  Director at Germanwatch. "Acting, negotiating and building coalitions is  the essential triptych".

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last updated 11 Dec 2010