High Ambition Coalition COP 26 Leaders’ Statement

 

High Ambition Coalition COP 26 Leaders’ Statement

 

  1. Alarmed by the latest findings of the IPCC that confirm the need for the most ambitious efforts within this decade to enable us to limit global warming to 1.5°C and prevent the most catastrophic climate impacts.

  2. Welcome the announcements, commitments, and actions undertaken by Parties that are aligned with keeping a 1.5°C limit within reach, and promote the achievement of the Paris Agreement’s temperature goals.

  3. Note with deep concern the gap between existing commitments and a 1.5°C pathway, stress the urgent need to accelerate the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in this decisive decade, and recognise the importance of ambitious action by the G20, whose members, if they align their policies with a 1.5°C pathway, could limit global warming by 2100 to 1.7°C.

  4. Recognize the devastating impacts already being felt today by people across the globe, and resolve to take urgent action to address the climate crisis. 

  5. Recognize the imperative of all countries to adapt to the ever-increasing impacts of climate change, and the urgent need for a substantial scale-up in accessible adaptation financing to ensure that no one, especially the most vulnerable, is left behind.

  6. Recognise the important work of the IPCC and its value as a basis for characterizing adaptation needs and strategies, welcome upcoming IPCC reports and the consideration of any future work dedicated to adaptation and climate tipping points.

We therefore,  

7. Stress the need to halve global emissions by 2030, and call on all Parties that have yet to do so to deliver more ambitious NDCs in line with a 1.5°C trajectory as soon as possible, and well ahead of COP27.

8. Call on all Parties to deliver mid-century net zero greenhouse gas emissions goals with strategies for their implementation that align with a 1.5°C trajectory as soon as possible, and in time for consideration by leaders at the global stocktake in 2023.

9. Resolve to deliver on these commitments through national policies that reorient economies towards a low and zero-carbon future, including to:

a.Halt investment in new unabated coal-fired power plants, and phase out unabated coal-fired power plants in line with the requirements for a 1.5°C trajectory. Halt public support for all overseas unabated coal projects in the energy sector.

b. Halt inefficient fossil fuel subsidies as soon as possible.

c. Commit to a collective goal of reducing global methane emissions by at least 30 percent from 2020 levels by 2030, and to take aggressive action to reduce emissions of all super-pollutants, also including hydrofluorocarbons and black carbon.

d. Support ambitious policies to reduce emissions in transport sectors, including to take more ambitious climate action in shipping and aviation.

10. Call on Parties to prepare and submit national adaptation plans and communications in time for their consideration in the global stocktake, recognizing the importance of support for, and international cooperation on, adaptation efforts, and taking into account the needs of developing country Parties, especially those that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change.

11.  Call on all developed countries to deliver on the goal of mobilising $100 billion annually to 2025 in the context of meaningful mitigation actions and transparency on implementation.

12.  Welcome the efforts of those countries that have stepped up their adaptation finance to a balance with mitigation financing, and call on those that have not yet done so to address the adaptation finance gap by scaling up adaptation finance to at least double current levels.

13.  Reiterate our commitment to make finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development, and commit to initiating deliberations for a post-2025 finance goal based on the best available science, an assessment of the needs and priorities of developing countries, and lessons from the $100 billion goal with the objective to have maximum impact. We also encourage the development of new financial instruments, taking into account the need for more consistent and reliable financing streams, and call for the scaling up of private sector finance.

14. Acknowledge that loss and damage, including slow onset events, is already being experienced in all countries and regions, but especially in vulnerable places. Call for enhanced interventions in relevant fields, and recognise the need to increase resources for averting, minimizing and addressing loss and damage.

15. Call for the finalisation of negotiations on outstanding elements of the Paris Agreement rulebook in full accordance with environmental integrity, transparency and accountability.  

His Excellency Mr. Surangel S. Whipps Jr, President of Palau

Her Excellency Mette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark

His Excellency David Kabua, President of the Republic of the Marshall Islands

His Excellency Mr. Joseph R. Biden Jr., President of the United States of America

His Excellency Mr. Carlos Alvardo Quesada, President of Costa Rica

His Excellency Mr. Xavier Bettel, Prime Minister of Luxembourg

Her Excellency Mrs. Angela Merkel, Federal Chancellor of Germany

His Excellency Mr Sauli Niinistö, President of the Republic of Finland

His Excellency Mr. John A. Briceño, Prime Minister of Belize

His Excellency Mr. Jonas Gahr Støre, Prime Minister of Norway

His Excellency Mr. Emmanuel Macron, President of France

His Excellency Mr. Pedro Sánchez Perez-Castejón, President of the Government of Spain

His Excellency Mr. Philip Pierre, Prime Minister of Saint Lucia

Her Excellency Ms. Jacinda Arden, Prime Minister of New Zealand

His Excellency, Mr. Keith Mitchell, Prime Minister of Grenada

His Excellency, Mr. Guy Parmelin, President of the Swiss Confederation

His Excellency, Mr. Ali Bongo Ondimba, President of Gabon

His Serene Highness Prince Albert II of Monaco

His Excellency Sebastián Piñera, President of Chile

His Excellency Mr. Josaia Voreqe Bainimarama, Prime Minister of Fiji

His Excellency Mr. Gaston Alponso Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda

His Excellency, Mr. Irakli Garibashvili, Prime Minister of Georgia

His Excellency Mr. Mark Rutte, Prime Minister of the Netherlands

His Excellency Mr. Guy Parmelin, President of the Swiss Federation

His Excellency Mr. Andrew Michael Holness, Prime Minister of Jamaica

Her Excellency Katrín Jakobsdóttir, Prime Minister of Iceland

His Excellency Iván Duque Márquez, President of the Republic of Colombia

His Excellency Honourable Dalton Tagelagi, Premier of Niue

Her Excellency Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, Prime Minister of the Independent State of Samoa

His Excellency Mr. Mario Draghi, President of the Council of Ministers of Italy

His Excellency Juan Orlando Hernandez Alvarado, President of Honduras

His Excellency Mr. Sonam Wangdi, Secretary National Environment Commission, Royal Government of Bhutan, on behalf of the Least Developed Countries Group

His Excellency Mr. Frans Timmermans, Vice-President of the European Commission

His Excellency Mr Andrew Yatilman, Secretary, Department of Environment, Climate Change and Emergency Management, President of the Federated States of Micronesia

Her Excellency Ms. Leonore Gewessler, Minister for Climate Action of Austria

His Excellency Eamon Ryan TD Minister for Environment, Climate and Communications Ireland

His Excellency Mr. Adrián Peña, Minister of Environment of Uruguay

Her Excellency Camille Robinson-Regis, Minister of Planning and Development of Trinidad and Tobago

His Excellency Fekadu Beyene, Commissioner for the Environment, Forest, and Climate Change Commission of Ethiopia

Her Excellency Jeanne d'Arc Mujawamariya, Minister of Environment of Rwanda

His Excellency Mr. Flavien Joubert, Minister for Agriculture, Climate Change, and Environment of the Seychelles

His Excellency Mr.  Steven Guilbeault, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change of Canada

Her Excellency Ms. Paula Cristina Francisco Coelho, Secretary of State for the Environment of the Republic of Angola

His Excellency Mr Flavien Philomel Joubert, Minister for Agriculture, Climate Change and Environment of the Seychelles

His Excellency Mr. João Pedro Matos Fernandes, Minister for the Environment and Climate Action of Portugal

His Excellency Mr Luca Beccari, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of San Marino.                            

His Excellency Mr. Milciades Concepción, Minister of Environment of Panama

Her Excellency Marsha Caddle, Minister of Economic Affairs and Investment, Barbados

His Excellency Juan Orlando Hernandez Alvarado, President of Honduras

Mr. Ulises Lovera, Dirección Nacional de Cambio Climatico, Ministerio del Ambiente y Desarrolo Sostenible, Paraguay

***

Contact: hac@highambitioncoalition.org; +447894219638

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Open Letter to the G20: Bigger Commitment Needed From G20 to Achieve 1.5C