UN Paris Agreement 2015: Victory for
mankind or empty promises to humanity?
By Mawutodzi
Kodzo Abissath
Jubilations Over the Paris Agreement |
A funny African
proverb says something to this effect:
“A ram that is suffering from diarrhoea messes up its own hind legs but
boasts that it is soiling the pathway for commuters.”
Fellow citizens
of the world, at long last, the much-touted UN Climate Change Summit 2015,
dubbed Paris COP 21, has come to an end! And “Mother Earth, our Common Home” is
free forever! Hopefully.
Trust the international civil servants
with their legalese and romantic use of the English language when it comes to
UN-sponsored events. But as a layman and for the purpose of this article, I
intend to try as much as possible to break down the technical terms so that our
own Junior High School graduates can understand the basic import of the Agreement
that was adopted in Paris. After all is the Agreement not for the future
generation?
Adoption of the Paris Agreement
On Monday, November 30, 2015, the
Conference of the Parties Twenty-first session in Paris (COP 21) took off in
Paris, the capital city of France. The jaw-jaw exercises ended on Friday,
December 11, 2015. A protocol or legal instrument that was adopted is known as the
Paris Agreement. It is under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC), simply referred to as “the Agreement.”
Even before I elaborate on the Paris
Agreement, let me inform my fellow citizens of the world that the said
Agreement has not yet been signed. The drafters of the Agreement will now
formally submit the document to the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon. Then it will be open for signature in New York,
United States of America, on 22 April 2016. There is a process to follow for
this to be accomplished.
When the Agreement reaches New York,
the UN Secretary-General will be the first human being on earth to be invited
to append his signature to it. This will be done at an event known as “a
high-level signature ceremony for the Agreement on 22 April 2016. “
the report says. Source: UN website www.un.org
After the UN Secretary-General has
signed the document, he, in turn, will now invite the rest of the member states
of the world body, known in this context as “Parties to the Convention" to another
ceremony to sign the Agreement. These Parties are expected to do this “at their
earliest opportunity, and to deposit their respective instruments of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, where appropriate, as soon as
possible.”
It is anticipated that this signature business
will continue until April 2017 when Parties to the Conference would have been expected to have endorsed the accord. So this ritual
will take another two years to complete. This process is what is known in the civil
service as bureaucracy. Thus, you can describe the simple signing of the Paris
Agreement as the “international bureaucracy of first degree” if you
please.
Reader,
do you think a country like Ghana where bush fires, ‘galamsey’ or illegal mining
and charcoal burning are destroying our forests, rivers and environment will
have to wait until April 2017 before taking any necessary action? This is why all
countries that have adopted their nationally intended contributions to reduction
of green house emissions to climate change or global warming must take their
destiny into their own hands.
In other words, developing countries,
especially in Africa, must not rely on the promises of industrialised nations
at all. It is some of their reckless
human activities that brought us all where we are today. Most often some of
their promises may not only be hyperbolic but hypocritical as well. They are
déjàvu!
By
the way, can somebody tell me whether Pope Francis was personally invited
to the Paris Conference? In the humble
opinion of this writer, Pope Francis is the symbol of the future of our Planet,
which he aptly refers to as “our Mother Earth, our Common Home!” He is the
Angel of the environmental sustainability of our time.
Ghana
as a nation should not stand and stare into the sky expecting the Master
Jesus to descent at all. Rather, we must be real as a people. What can we do to
stop or at least to minimise the effect of climate change on our environment?
How do we manage our natural resources God has given us prudently?
Must
we continue the rapacious pollution of our water bodies and the fast drying up
of our rivers? Do we have to take delight in destroying our forest reserves? Do
we have to be causing wild bush fires because of little rodents like rats? How
do we ensure proper protection of our environment to guarantee food security
through sustainable development processes? These are some fundamental questions
that must engage our mental gymnastics locally, while hoping for the magic of
the Paris Agreement globally.
What does the Paris
Agreement say?
First
of all it is important to mention that the Paris Conference has set a Climate
Change Summit world record in terms of participation. For the first time, over 190
countries took part in the deliberations and negotiations.
Negotiators
unanimously agreed that “emissions-slashing commitments” must contain in the
Agreement. That industrialised nations who are the worse climatic offenders
must help poor countries financially to fight climate change menace.
Previously
most advanced nations were playing tricks at the negotiating table. Some of
them pretended to be committed to the terms of various agreements adopted
be it Kyoto or Copenhagen or Rio de Janeiro etc. But when they returned home
then they renege on their promises and go back to their bad habits of global
warming.
The
worse thing was that they never wanted to spend a “cent” or one Ghana Cedi to support developing countries in their fight against climate change. It was this
singular adoption of “financial commitment” that was hailed as the victory of the
Paris Agreement. It is historical! But
how much exactly in monetary terms was committed at the Conference?
Some
foreign media reported that the target was about $100billion USD. But they quickly added that although this
amount was to be raised by 2025, the agreement failed to specify how much any
country must pay so that they could be held accountable if they renege on their
promises. This explains why as a writer in a developing country the title of my
article is “Victory for mankind or empty
promises to humanity?”
The author works with Information Services Department in Ghana abissath@gmail.com
The author works with Information Services Department in Ghana abissath@gmail.com