Realising Climate Reparations: Towards a Global Climate Stabilization Fund and Resilience Fund Programme for Loss and Damage in Marginalised and Former Colonised Societies

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keston Perry

Subject Climate change and the Paris accord. Significance The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), also known as the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21) to the UN Convention on Climate Change, will take place in Paris in December. Its goal is drafting a successor to the expired Kyoto Protocol, in the form of the first universal climate agreement, which should enter into force in 2020 at the latest. In the coming months, UN parties will put forward their proposed emissions reduction targets for the Paris summit. As of May 1, only Switzerland, Russia, Gabon, the United States, Mexico, Liechtenstein, Andorra, Norway and the EU had disclosed their official intentions, representing around 17% of all parties to the negotiations and only 30% of global emissions. Impacts Unlike the Kyoto Protocol, the Paris text is likely to be an 'accord' instead of a 'treaty', meaning that its legal power will be weak. The mitigation commitments put on the table so far are insufficient to spare humanity from the consequences of climate change. Climate resilience becomes an ever-urgent goal to be advanced in Paris; adaptation costs will be high in future decades. The Paris summit will need to deliver a global insurance scheme covering loss and damage for the most vulnerable countries.


2015 ◽  
Vol 114 (771) ◽  
pp. 144-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masroora Haque ◽  
Saleemul Huq

Bangladesh, which is particularly exposed to the consequences of climate change and suffered two devastating cyclones in recent years, has taken a leading role … in advocating new international commitments to support countries that bear the heaviest burden of loss and damage.


Subject Prospects for global climate policy in 2016. Significance Collective efforts to respond to climate change, as in previous years, will prove a source of domestic and international political controversy, particularly as vulnerable states cope with climate-induced loss and damage in a post-COP21 global climate regime. Pledges made by countries themselves at the COP21 summit -- both for emission reductions and for financial contributions to support developing countries -- will draw international scrutiny to avoid backsliding or double-counting.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marci Culley ◽  
Holly Angelique ◽  
Courte Voorhees ◽  
Brian John Bishop ◽  
Peta Louise Dzidic ◽  
...  

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