Island States Urge Fast Climate Mitigation Under Montreal
Protocol
8 countries co-sponsor
amendment to phase down potent greenhouse gas
1 May 2015 – Today eight Pacific Island States submitted a formal proposal to amend the Montreal Protocol Ozone Treaty to phase
down hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), the manmade greenhouse gases used in
refrigerators and air conditioners. Led
by the Federated States of Micronesia, which along with Mauritius was the first
country to propose reducing HFCs under the Montreal Protocol in 2009, the group
of amendment co-sponsors this year includes Kiribati, the Marshall Islands,
Mauritius, Palau, the Philippines, Samoa and Solomon Islands. The islands are urging fast climate protection
to slow temperature and sea-level rise, and to reduce the intensity of storm
surges and typhoons.
“Cutting HFCs, can reduce sea-level rise faster than
any other strategy by avoiding the equivalent of up to 100 billion tonnes of
carbon dioxide by mid-century, and up to 0.5°C by the end of the century,” said
Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable
Development. “The island States recognize that the HFC amendment is the world’s
best near-term plan to slow climate
change, making it a top priority for many countries already suffering
climate impacts.” In early April FSM was
hit by category five, super-typhoon Maysak, leaving thousands displaced. In 2013,
one of the strongest typhoons ever recorded, Yolanda, hit the Philippines killing
more than 6,300.
“There is no way
the world can achieve its agreed temperature stabilization goals if HFCs alone
contribute warming of a half a degree Celsius by the end of the century,” said
Andrew Yatilman, Micronesia’s Director of Environment and Emergency Management.
“HFCs could represent 10-15% of global climate forcing by mid-century. We
have the potential to take this projected forcing completely out of the
system.”
Achieving an
early climate win in the Montreal Protocol at the November Meeting of the
Parties in Dubai would also bode well for a global climate agreement expected
to be finalized during negotiations in Paris in December, Yatilman said.
“Locking in an agreement in Dubai to prevent billions of tons of emissions
would be the perfect cornerstone for a broader climate agreement in
Paris.”
Support for the amendment is rapidly increasing. This year, India
switched its previous opposition and for the first time presented a formal
proposal to cut HFCs. At the
extraordinary Montreal Protocol meeting last month in Bangkok, the 54 countries
of Africa called for an immediate start to formal negotiations to cut HFCs.
Reducing HFCs has been a priority on President Obama and
Secretary of State John Kerry’s climate agenda.
“It is essential that we get a buy-in on this,” John Kerry told the Washington Post
last week, “because HFCs are one of the most dangerous greenhouse gases on
Earth — far more damaging and potent that carbon dioxide.” The U.S., Mexico and Canada re-submitted their proposal for the 6th
year in a row. The E.U. has
also filed a formal amendment proposal for the first time. Some countries have also included HFC cuts in
their intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs) to climate
protection under the UN process, which is aiming for a separate agreement in
Paris in December.
Formal negotiations are expected to start at the next
Montreal Protocol Open Ended Working Group in Paris this July, following
further inter-sessional negotiating sessions agreed to last month in Bangkok. The Montreal Protocol has already successfully
phased out over 100 ozone-depleting substances, avoiding an equivalent of an
estimated 9.5 billion tonnes of CO2 emissions per year. Fast
implementation of the HFC amendment can add the equivalent of up to 64 billion
tonnes of CO2 mitigation, and, according to a new analysis by
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, countries can double their contribution to
climate protection by improving the efficiency of air conditioners when they
cut use of HFCs.
Contacts:
Durwood Zaelke zaelke@inece.org, (202) 498-2457; Katie Fletcher kfletcher@igsd.org, (202) 338-1300
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