COP24: Call for climate
action as summit nears conclusion
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| A speaker addresses the COP24 U.N. Climate Change Conference 2018 in Katowice. |
Final negotiations are continuing at the COP24 Climate
Conference in Poland where a draft is expected to be presented which includes a
rule book to implement the Paris pact.
By Lydia O'Kane
As the COP24 Climate talks draw to a close in Poland,
vulnerable nations are warning against, what they call a “mediocre” outcome at
the summit. On this the penultimate day of the meeting, the group called the
Climate Vulnerable Forum said they were already experiencing the harmful
effects of global warming and are pressing for greater unity among rich and
poor countries.
Paris rule book
Meanwhile, negotiators from almost 200 countries are making
a last-minute effort to resolve differences on the rules that will govern the
2015 Paris climate accord. Speaking from the conference in Katowice, Neil
Thorns, Director of Advocacy, at CAFOD, the official aid agency for the
Catholic Church in England and Wales, stressed the importance of trust during
these negotiations.
“I think with all of these things, there’s been progress made
on some things and still more work to be done on others and so, when we came
into the second week of the negotiations there was lots of brackets around the
text; that means it hasn’t been agreed and so, there’s all sorts of discussions
still to be had… I think what’s clear about it is though that at the heart of
all this has to be the question about trust and you wonder whether there is
enough trust to be able to have the flexibility to compromise, but recognizing
that by compromising you’re not trying to lessen the ambition, you’re trying to
move forward in a progressive way and it feels like that’s where some of the
countries are at the minute.”
Ambition, action, and true solidarity
At a Press Conference on the sidelines of the summit on
Wednesday the Secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development, Msgr. Bruno-Marie Duffé stressed the Holy See’s call for
“ambition, action, and true solidarity”. He also said that, Pope Francis’
Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’ is an encouragement to nations to listen
attentively to the cry of the earth.
Neil Thorns noted that, “what you hope, is the fact that
people see common sense, that people do see the sense of acting for future
generations, but also acting for generations now and I think Msgr. Duffe summed
it up very well, he said ‘today is tomorrow you can’t leave these things’, so,
actually what we really do need is action now.”

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