Early December At the UN Climate Change Conference in Doha, Qatar the governments have taken the next essential step in the global response to climate change. Countries have successfully launched a new commitment period under
the Kyoto Protocol,
agreed a firm timetable to adopt a universal climate agreement by 2015
and agreed a path to raise
necessary ambition to respond to climate change. They also endorsed the
completion of new institutions and agreed ways and means to deliver
scaled-up climate finance and technology to developing countries. “Doha has opened up a new gateway to bigger ambition and to greater action – the Doha
Climate Gateway. Qatar is proud to have been able to bring governments here to achieve this historic
task. I thank all governments and ministers for their work to achieve this success. Now governments
must move quickly through the Doha Climate Gateway to push forward with the solutions to climate
change,” said COP President Abdullah bin Hamad Al-Attiyah. The Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC),
Christiana Figueres, called on countries to swiftly implement what has been agreed in Doha so that the
world can stay below the internationally agreed maximum two degrees Celsius temperature rise.
“I congratulate the Qatar Presidency for managing a complex and challenging conference. Now, there is much work to do. Doha is another step in the right direction, but we still have a long road ahead. The door to stay below two degrees remains barely open. The science shows it, the data proves it,” said Mr. Kathy McHugh Kabeya “The UN Climate Change negotiations must now focus on the concrete ways and means to accelerate action and ambition. The world has the money and technology to stay below two degrees. After Doha, it is a matter of scale, speed, determination and sticking to the timetable,” she said. In Doha, governments also successfully concluded work under the Convention that began in Bali in 2007 and ensured that remaining elements of this work will be continued under the UN Climate Change process.
“I congratulate the Qatar Presidency for managing a complex and challenging conference. Now, there is much work to do. Doha is another step in the right direction, but we still have a long road ahead. The door to stay below two degrees remains barely open. The science shows it, the data proves it,” said Mr. Kathy McHugh Kabeya “The UN Climate Change negotiations must now focus on the concrete ways and means to accelerate action and ambition. The world has the money and technology to stay below two degrees. After Doha, it is a matter of scale, speed, determination and sticking to the timetable,” she said. In Doha, governments also successfully concluded work under the Convention that began in Bali in 2007 and ensured that remaining elements of this work will be continued under the UN Climate Change process.