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United Nations
Draft Resolution 1.1
United Nations
Framework Convention
on Climate Change
Distr.: General
9 September 2015
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Signatories: Commonwealth of Australia, The Republic of Austria,
Brazil, Canada, The People’s Republic of China, The France
Republic, The Federal Republic of Germany, The Republic of
Indonesia, India, Iran, The State of Israel, Kenya, The Republic of
Maldives, New Zealand, The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Singapore,
South Africa, The Republic of South Korea, The Russian Federation,
The Republic of Turkey, Tuvalu, The United Arab Emirates, The
United States of America.
To the Convention,
Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the
United Nations,
Recalling the objective of the Convention as set out in its Article
2 of the Rio Convention,
Further recalling the Kyoto Protocol, the Bali Action Plan, the
Cancun Agreement, Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions,
Montreal Protocol,
Recognizing the urgency of action needed to limit dangerous rises
in global average temperature must below 20C compared with pre-
industrial levels,
Acknowledging that the principles of common but differentiated
responsibilities and respective capabilities must be applied in dynamic
way in the light of evolving, responsibilities, capabilities and different
national circumstances,
Deeply concerned of the high concentration of world CO2 would
cause a significant alteration of the world environment stability which
further can threatened the existence of mankind,
Alarmed by the emergent climate change impact occurring on
some parts of the world has distracted society welfare and nation
survival capability,
Fully concerned by the potentially drowning isle and anomaly of
climate temperatures resulting in the obstruction of countries’
development and growth,
Taking into consideration the extent of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change mandate and each
nations’ respective soveriegnty,
Observing the abundant variety of resources available in each
nations that could potentially accelerate the global effort to a greener
earth,
Fulfilling UNFCCC Past Commitments
1. Supports the accelerated and facilitated effort aiming at reducing of global
greenhouse gas emissions, through:
a. Implementing national low-carbon development strategies,
b. Employing national adaptation strategies,
c. Financing developing countries’ adaptation and mitigation,
2. Endorses the enhancement of regional bodies roles, namely European
Union, African Union, Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Community of
Latin American and Caribbean States, Commonwealth of Independent States,
East Asia Summits, and plus one actors, to act upon the urgency to:
a. Improve structural flexibility in order to adjust to a broader
economic condition,
b. Reinforce the financing of developed countries adaptation
and mitigation needs,
c. Craft constitutionalized agreements regarding regional
standards and needs,
d. Build multilateral cooperations with outside partners,
e. Ensure consistency and synergies in policy making and
implementation,
f. Raising political awareness to strengthen institutional
capacity and transparency of climate change domestic state
programs, within:
i. National level,
ii. Sub-regional level,
iii. Regional level,
iiii.Inter Regional level
3. Further recommends implementing regional to regional and regional to
international mechanisms to tackle regionally binding voluntary policies,
through consensual incentives, in contrast to mandatory policies, resulting in
social sanctions, based on established NAMAs, organized and managed as such:
a. Calls upon state to:
i. Carry out investigations based on state violations
reported by regional bodies,
ii. Monitor the Implementation of relevant domestic and
international policies,
iii. Support social sanctions as a fair means of penalizing
the country that fails to reach emission goals,
iv. Judicially act upon any breaking of commitments
accordingly and justly within its own nation;
b. Regional bodies will be responsible to:
i. Evaluate state carbon reduction target progress,
ii. Monitor the Implementation of relevant domestic and
international policies,
iii. Manage and discuss regional standards and
prioritization of needs,
c. Convention of Parties Bodies has a duty to:
i. Report directly to the UNFCCC of all activities,
ii. Respond to reports from regional bodies,
iii. Assist in regional body summits and meetings,
iv. Achieve consensus through diplomatic dialogue with
participating nations to determine the context of mandatory
and voluntary policies in regards to its level of urgency,
d. Reaffirm the nature of region to region agreements regarding
voluntary and mandatory policies to be settled based on:
i. Mutually beneficial results,
ii. State and international laws,
iii. Common but differentiated responsibilities and
capabilities principle,
iv. Gurantee of short term and long term effects,
4. Draws attention to optimizing Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and
Forest Degradation (REDD+) and Blue Carbon Initiative programs, through:
a. Recognizing the need to protect world forests’ as the major
repository of carbon, encourages:
i. The collaboration of the World Forestry Congress and
the Standing Committee on Finance;
b. Taking into account the impacts of projects programs to
poor and vulnerable communities, through:
i. The compilation of feasibility reports of corporate and
industrial operations,
ii. Tightening cooperational ties between local monitoring
and executive bodies to ensure proper law enforcement to
provide community security and ease implementations of
ecological programs;
c. Integrating forest landscape restoration as the main priority
of REDD+ programs, by:
i. Reusing degradable land to maintain agricultural
productivity,
ii. Consulting local engineers and planners to assist in
spatial planning near forested areas,
d. Amplifying efforts made by the Blue Carbon Initiative,
through:
i. Continued efforts to investigate and analyze state of
ecosystems by conducting expiditions and compiling
current data and Information onto a regional database,
ii. Further facilitating relevant individuals in pursuing a
safer aquaculture harvesting program and the conservation
of its environment,
5. Requests to build on and strengthen the Cancun Adaptation Framework, as
well as the Nairobi Work Program, in order to:
a. Provide further guidance to Parties to improve the
effectiveness of national adaptation actions;
b. Facilitate enhanced cooperation in preparing and
implementing adaptation measures;
c. Support adequate institutional agreements, including
systematic planning capacity setting consistent policies and
regulatory frameworks;
Transparency, Tracking, and Regulations of All Relevant Actors
6. Further invites inclusive dialogue while including state, regional,
international collaboration to establish transparency, increase trust, productivity
and influence, share common goals and targets, report progress, and address
ongoing challenges in combatting climate change, which will consist of:
a. Encouraging the need for give and take resolutions, to:
i. Provide comprehensive and critical feedbacks,
ii. Clarify ongoing and future programs,
. iii. Streamlining effectiveness of policy practices,
vi. Adjust action steps if necessary;
b. The creation of an annual internationally-held
environmental forum, including actors such as:
i. Relevant NGOs,
ii. Youth Organizations,
. iii. Governmental Proxies,
vi. Private and Public Corporations,
v. Supporting International and UN Bodies;
c. Redefining policy-making standards and procedures, by:
i. Taking into consideration the 3Cs which are Cost,
Competitiveness and Comprehensiveness when crafting
policies,
ii. Setting national standards in place to reduce carbon
pollution from power plants as part of a continued effort to
refine the world’s power sector;
d. Recommending routinely inspections, under the mandate of
state governments through UNFCCC representatives, of
national corporations to:
i. Ensure transparency,
ii Enforce existing domestic to international laws and
policies,
iii. Review ongoing operations to be inclined with existing
programs of the UNFCCC,
iv. Ensure accountability through corporate sustainability
recording and disclosure of carbon risk and sustainability
information integrated to their reporting cycle, especially
for publicly listed and large companies;
7. Takes note of the need to conform investments of industrial players, corporate
investors, foriegn aid, relevant to the state of the environment, in regards to the
climate, through:
a. Recognizing the need to make investments work for the
climate, through:
i. Ensuring all development assistance is in line and
assessed to be climate sensitive,
ii Tracking investments to ensure that they are disaster-
resilient to support adaptation and does not emit GHG,
iii. Shifting market forces to invest in sustainable markets by
creating new sustainable market sources,
iv. Recommends new policies for Clean Development
Mechanism where beneficiary countries in turn would
cooperate with donor countries in creating markets for
mutually beneficial economic results;
8. Further encourages the monitoring of member states with established target
indicators to carbon emission targets, including:
a. The assessment of local project GHG reduction, adaptation,
and mitigation scales, that reflects:
i. The magnitude of contribution,
ii Amount and quality of manpower,
iii. Available supporting resources;
b. Party shall ensure consistency between the methodologies used
to quantify its commitment and those used to demonstrate the
implementation of its commitment; account for all significant
anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of
greenhouse gases and be increasingly comprehensive over time,
remembering that;
i. Once a party accounts for a gas, sector, category, activity,
area of land or pool towards its commitment, it shall
continue to do so in the future,
ii Common metrics and methodologies shall be agreed and
revised over time by concerning actors,
iii. Any revisions shall apply for subsequent periods of all
Parties;
iv. Metrics and methodologies shall be adopted by the IPCC;
Cooperation in the Financing and Application of Climate Mitigation
9. Supports the transfer of technology for developing and least developed
countries (LDCs), especially through:
a. Facilitation of instructive lessons in methods of
manufacturing;
b. Aid in developing skills and knowledge,
c. Sending technology brokers to bridge emergent worlds and
apply scientific concepts to suit the nation’s situation or
circumstance,
d. Advancing technological transfer mechanisms by
recommending WIPO (World International Property
Organization) to open eco-related technologies to be
opened for public sectors,
e. Prioritizing the building of technology transfer offices in
state regions to work on behalf of research institutions,
governments and multinationals;
f. Urgently calling upon the need to develop clean
technologies of, but not limited to, efficient agriculture,
water management, transportation to be implemented in
developing and underdeveloped countries hand in hand
with developed national aids;
9. Confirms climate finance as a means to achieve the below 2°C objective and
to support adaptation, all Parties shall:
a. Takes differentiated action according to their evolving
respective responsibilities and capabilities, to mobilize public and
private finance flows, domestic and international;
b. Takes steps to improve enabling environments and policy
frameworks for low GHG and climate resilient investment,
including for the domestic private sector;
c. Integrates climate objectives into public and private
investments, national policies, and development strategies, in
order to shift investment patterns towards low-GHG and climate
resilient economies and societies;
d. Stimulates voluntary commitments and public- private
partnerships, including local private sector, and more systematic
exchange of best practices on shifting private capital toward low
carbon investments;
e. Periodically report on the level and range of climate finance
flows, the efforts that contribute to the mobilization of climate
finance;
f. The Green Climate Fund serve as the operating entities of the
multilateral financial mechanism;
10. Encourages the enhancement of the Green Climate Fund authority to
evaluate registered NAMAs, through:
a. Allocating gathered financial capabilities from governments,
public and private sectors, voluntarily, to registered developing
countries, and in turn will open up their markets to donor nations,
flourishing both economies as a whole;
b. Monitoring their implementation onword and continuing to
determine incentives of existing projects to achieve carbon
reduction targets by 2020.
Sustainable and Renewable Energy
10. Recommends the prioritization of the research and development of clean
energy, through:
a. Unlocking long-term investments in clean energy
innovations;
b. Building on partnerships of regional states to optimize
wind, hydropower, solar power geothermal energy as a
means to generate clean energy;
c. Deploring the facilitation of industrial permits approving
utility-scale clean energy alternatives;
d. Encourages the expansion and modernization of the
electric grid through an interconnected system between
states to optimize energy generation and cost-effectiveness;
e. Further encourages the need for capacity building in
developing and underdeveloped nations by sending
environmentlist and climatologist experts to assist in the
field;
f. Assisting the ecological transistions of national work force
to ease in the shifting of supply demands to a greener
market;
11. Realizing innovative energy generating programs:
a. Reaffirms the benefits of Carbon Sequestration to broad
private companies’ collaboration on the investment of
mechanisms, mainly but not limited to oil and gas related
companies, in:
i. Energy generation through drilling in respects to proper
procedures and the environment,
ii. Carbon dioxide reductions from the atmosphere,
iii. Reducing the overall costs of energy generation,
b. Further encourages the development of methane energy
generation technology and methods, known as “landfill
gas”, as a means to transform organic trash into energy by:
i. Capture and trap mechanisms,
ii. Drilling through pipelines that create steam turning turbi
nes and activating reactors which in turns generate clean
energy,
c. Deplores the necessity to invest in the research and
development of biofuels and bioethanols to elevate both its
quality and quantity, as alternative means to existing fuel
sources;
Education and Public Awareness
12. Endorses the need to reach out to various actors to encourage agents of
change in supporting nation’s efforts the path towards a greener world, by:
a. Recommends the utilization of social media and prominent
figures endorsements by creating new social trends to
appeal to young demographics, to:
i. Instill the realization to care for the earth,
ii. Promote healthy and green lifestyles,
iii. Encourage active participation;
b. Suggests for the launch of campaigns, workshops and
green programs through grass-rooted movements, in:
i. Schools and universities,
ii. Local environmental seminars and forums,
iii. Corporation-based socialization through Corporate
Social Responsibility,
iv. Regional levels of governmental meetings to ensure full
investment in measures to assist developing and
underdeveloped countries to build their skills and
knowledge base in addressing climate change challenges;
c. Accepting the need to educate the public to be
environmentally aware to make mise choices of consuming
market products in the shifting of sustainable market
demands, through:
i. Media advertisements,
ii. Newspaper and Magazine articles,
iii. Public Service Announcements,
iv. Local exhibitions;
d. Proposes reaching out to UNESCO to recommend the
integration of green international curriculum standards,
namely:
i. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (3Rs);
ii. Reforestation and ongoing international efforts to
combat climate change;
iii. Causes and Effects of climate change;
Adaptation on Climate Change
13. Expresses its hope for all countries to have a science based and participatory
national climate risk assessment to be developed into future strategies and
programs in respects to the environment and nation’s circumstances that will be
realized, through:
a. Emphasizing the need for disaster risk reduction, by:
i. Reducing the impact of disaster on poverty eradication
and economic growth,
ii. Taking into consideration the impacts on all social
groups especially poor and vulnerable communities;
b. Approving assistance of communities to adapt, plan,
facilitate programs and prepare for climate change to
become climate resilient and climate sensitive, mainly
through:
i. Coastal resource managers,
ii. Water utility managers,
iii. Park rangers,
iv. Other relevant actors;
g. Draws attention to the importance of coastal engineering to
prevent sinking isles, through the:
i. The construction of dams,
ii. Land reclamation and reconstruction efforts in respects
to surrounding ecosystem,
h. Deplores the urgency of regulating heavy duty vehicles, by
recognizing the need of a continued effort to increase fuel
economy standards in regards to national interests, through
facilitation of public-private partnerships with:
i. Foriegn and domestic investors,
ii. Local entrepreneurs,
iii. Government proxies,
iv. Experts in the field;
v.Transportation sectors;
14. Encourages the integration of the climate change agenda in the Sustainable
Development Goals, such as climate-related goals on water, economy, poverty
food and agriculture, health, energy, by the:
a. Supporting the initiative of Sustainable Development
Goals that will established in September, 2015, that replace
the Millenium Development Goals;
b. Calling for the collaboration of UN Bodies in regards to
their role in realizing the upcoming Sustainable
Development Goals;
c. Encourages the importance of dialogues regarding
environmental issues in global UN Summits to assist in
easing integration;
d. Deplores the need to address food security of threatened
climate change affected countries by creating supply and
demand cooperation between complementary countries;
e. Further reaffirms the importance of protecting most
vulnerable populations from the impact of climate change,
by the:
i. Equipment of sufficient technologies and tools as
preparation,
ii. Socialization of instructions to cope with emerging
issues,
iii. Reformation of local healthcare systems in aiding
climital health issues,
15. Encourages all parties, scientists and experts, and NGOs to establish global
discussion on how to build the climate resilience society in which enabling
society to be able to bounce back and recover from the climate change, and the
discussion should include:
a. Exchange of information of success and failure in facing the climate
change;
b. Past and present condition and future risks of climate change;
c. Ways to improve the secure livelihoods, access to education, information
availability of climate change impact, healthcare facilities, social support
but not limited to early-warning system, understanding vulnerabilities of
all members of society, access to technology and service and quality
information, as well as ensuring ecosystem be healthy and diverse.
United Nations Framework on Climate Change
9 September 2015

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LATESTREVDR

  • 1. United Nations Draft Resolution 1.1 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Distr.: General 9 September 2015 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Signatories: Commonwealth of Australia, The Republic of Austria, Brazil, Canada, The People’s Republic of China, The France Republic, The Federal Republic of Germany, The Republic of Indonesia, India, Iran, The State of Israel, Kenya, The Republic of Maldives, New Zealand, The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, The Republic of South Korea, The Russian Federation, The Republic of Turkey, Tuvalu, The United Arab Emirates, The United States of America. To the Convention, Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, Recalling the objective of the Convention as set out in its Article 2 of the Rio Convention, Further recalling the Kyoto Protocol, the Bali Action Plan, the Cancun Agreement, Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions, Montreal Protocol, Recognizing the urgency of action needed to limit dangerous rises in global average temperature must below 20C compared with pre- industrial levels, Acknowledging that the principles of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities must be applied in dynamic way in the light of evolving, responsibilities, capabilities and different national circumstances,
  • 2. Deeply concerned of the high concentration of world CO2 would cause a significant alteration of the world environment stability which further can threatened the existence of mankind, Alarmed by the emergent climate change impact occurring on some parts of the world has distracted society welfare and nation survival capability, Fully concerned by the potentially drowning isle and anomaly of climate temperatures resulting in the obstruction of countries’ development and growth, Taking into consideration the extent of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change mandate and each nations’ respective soveriegnty, Observing the abundant variety of resources available in each nations that could potentially accelerate the global effort to a greener earth, Fulfilling UNFCCC Past Commitments 1. Supports the accelerated and facilitated effort aiming at reducing of global greenhouse gas emissions, through: a. Implementing national low-carbon development strategies, b. Employing national adaptation strategies, c. Financing developing countries’ adaptation and mitigation, 2. Endorses the enhancement of regional bodies roles, namely European Union, African Union, Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, Commonwealth of Independent States, East Asia Summits, and plus one actors, to act upon the urgency to: a. Improve structural flexibility in order to adjust to a broader economic condition, b. Reinforce the financing of developed countries adaptation and mitigation needs, c. Craft constitutionalized agreements regarding regional standards and needs, d. Build multilateral cooperations with outside partners, e. Ensure consistency and synergies in policy making and implementation, f. Raising political awareness to strengthen institutional capacity and transparency of climate change domestic state programs, within:
  • 3. i. National level, ii. Sub-regional level, iii. Regional level, iiii.Inter Regional level 3. Further recommends implementing regional to regional and regional to international mechanisms to tackle regionally binding voluntary policies, through consensual incentives, in contrast to mandatory policies, resulting in social sanctions, based on established NAMAs, organized and managed as such: a. Calls upon state to: i. Carry out investigations based on state violations reported by regional bodies, ii. Monitor the Implementation of relevant domestic and international policies, iii. Support social sanctions as a fair means of penalizing the country that fails to reach emission goals, iv. Judicially act upon any breaking of commitments accordingly and justly within its own nation; b. Regional bodies will be responsible to: i. Evaluate state carbon reduction target progress, ii. Monitor the Implementation of relevant domestic and international policies, iii. Manage and discuss regional standards and prioritization of needs, c. Convention of Parties Bodies has a duty to: i. Report directly to the UNFCCC of all activities, ii. Respond to reports from regional bodies, iii. Assist in regional body summits and meetings, iv. Achieve consensus through diplomatic dialogue with participating nations to determine the context of mandatory and voluntary policies in regards to its level of urgency, d. Reaffirm the nature of region to region agreements regarding voluntary and mandatory policies to be settled based on: i. Mutually beneficial results, ii. State and international laws, iii. Common but differentiated responsibilities and capabilities principle, iv. Gurantee of short term and long term effects,
  • 4. 4. Draws attention to optimizing Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) and Blue Carbon Initiative programs, through: a. Recognizing the need to protect world forests’ as the major repository of carbon, encourages: i. The collaboration of the World Forestry Congress and the Standing Committee on Finance; b. Taking into account the impacts of projects programs to poor and vulnerable communities, through: i. The compilation of feasibility reports of corporate and industrial operations, ii. Tightening cooperational ties between local monitoring and executive bodies to ensure proper law enforcement to provide community security and ease implementations of ecological programs; c. Integrating forest landscape restoration as the main priority of REDD+ programs, by: i. Reusing degradable land to maintain agricultural productivity, ii. Consulting local engineers and planners to assist in spatial planning near forested areas, d. Amplifying efforts made by the Blue Carbon Initiative, through: i. Continued efforts to investigate and analyze state of ecosystems by conducting expiditions and compiling current data and Information onto a regional database, ii. Further facilitating relevant individuals in pursuing a safer aquaculture harvesting program and the conservation of its environment, 5. Requests to build on and strengthen the Cancun Adaptation Framework, as well as the Nairobi Work Program, in order to: a. Provide further guidance to Parties to improve the effectiveness of national adaptation actions; b. Facilitate enhanced cooperation in preparing and implementing adaptation measures; c. Support adequate institutional agreements, including systematic planning capacity setting consistent policies and regulatory frameworks;
  • 5. Transparency, Tracking, and Regulations of All Relevant Actors 6. Further invites inclusive dialogue while including state, regional, international collaboration to establish transparency, increase trust, productivity and influence, share common goals and targets, report progress, and address ongoing challenges in combatting climate change, which will consist of: a. Encouraging the need for give and take resolutions, to: i. Provide comprehensive and critical feedbacks, ii. Clarify ongoing and future programs, . iii. Streamlining effectiveness of policy practices, vi. Adjust action steps if necessary; b. The creation of an annual internationally-held environmental forum, including actors such as: i. Relevant NGOs, ii. Youth Organizations, . iii. Governmental Proxies, vi. Private and Public Corporations, v. Supporting International and UN Bodies; c. Redefining policy-making standards and procedures, by: i. Taking into consideration the 3Cs which are Cost, Competitiveness and Comprehensiveness when crafting policies, ii. Setting national standards in place to reduce carbon pollution from power plants as part of a continued effort to refine the world’s power sector; d. Recommending routinely inspections, under the mandate of state governments through UNFCCC representatives, of national corporations to: i. Ensure transparency, ii Enforce existing domestic to international laws and policies, iii. Review ongoing operations to be inclined with existing programs of the UNFCCC, iv. Ensure accountability through corporate sustainability recording and disclosure of carbon risk and sustainability information integrated to their reporting cycle, especially for publicly listed and large companies; 7. Takes note of the need to conform investments of industrial players, corporate investors, foriegn aid, relevant to the state of the environment, in regards to the climate, through:
  • 6. a. Recognizing the need to make investments work for the climate, through: i. Ensuring all development assistance is in line and assessed to be climate sensitive, ii Tracking investments to ensure that they are disaster- resilient to support adaptation and does not emit GHG, iii. Shifting market forces to invest in sustainable markets by creating new sustainable market sources, iv. Recommends new policies for Clean Development Mechanism where beneficiary countries in turn would cooperate with donor countries in creating markets for mutually beneficial economic results; 8. Further encourages the monitoring of member states with established target indicators to carbon emission targets, including: a. The assessment of local project GHG reduction, adaptation, and mitigation scales, that reflects: i. The magnitude of contribution, ii Amount and quality of manpower, iii. Available supporting resources; b. Party shall ensure consistency between the methodologies used to quantify its commitment and those used to demonstrate the implementation of its commitment; account for all significant anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases and be increasingly comprehensive over time, remembering that; i. Once a party accounts for a gas, sector, category, activity, area of land or pool towards its commitment, it shall continue to do so in the future, ii Common metrics and methodologies shall be agreed and revised over time by concerning actors, iii. Any revisions shall apply for subsequent periods of all Parties; iv. Metrics and methodologies shall be adopted by the IPCC; Cooperation in the Financing and Application of Climate Mitigation 9. Supports the transfer of technology for developing and least developed countries (LDCs), especially through: a. Facilitation of instructive lessons in methods of manufacturing; b. Aid in developing skills and knowledge,
  • 7. c. Sending technology brokers to bridge emergent worlds and apply scientific concepts to suit the nation’s situation or circumstance, d. Advancing technological transfer mechanisms by recommending WIPO (World International Property Organization) to open eco-related technologies to be opened for public sectors, e. Prioritizing the building of technology transfer offices in state regions to work on behalf of research institutions, governments and multinationals; f. Urgently calling upon the need to develop clean technologies of, but not limited to, efficient agriculture, water management, transportation to be implemented in developing and underdeveloped countries hand in hand with developed national aids; 9. Confirms climate finance as a means to achieve the below 2°C objective and to support adaptation, all Parties shall: a. Takes differentiated action according to their evolving respective responsibilities and capabilities, to mobilize public and private finance flows, domestic and international; b. Takes steps to improve enabling environments and policy frameworks for low GHG and climate resilient investment, including for the domestic private sector; c. Integrates climate objectives into public and private investments, national policies, and development strategies, in order to shift investment patterns towards low-GHG and climate resilient economies and societies; d. Stimulates voluntary commitments and public- private partnerships, including local private sector, and more systematic exchange of best practices on shifting private capital toward low carbon investments; e. Periodically report on the level and range of climate finance flows, the efforts that contribute to the mobilization of climate finance; f. The Green Climate Fund serve as the operating entities of the multilateral financial mechanism; 10. Encourages the enhancement of the Green Climate Fund authority to evaluate registered NAMAs, through: a. Allocating gathered financial capabilities from governments, public and private sectors, voluntarily, to registered developing countries, and in turn will open up their markets to donor nations, flourishing both economies as a whole;
  • 8. b. Monitoring their implementation onword and continuing to determine incentives of existing projects to achieve carbon reduction targets by 2020. Sustainable and Renewable Energy 10. Recommends the prioritization of the research and development of clean energy, through: a. Unlocking long-term investments in clean energy innovations; b. Building on partnerships of regional states to optimize wind, hydropower, solar power geothermal energy as a means to generate clean energy; c. Deploring the facilitation of industrial permits approving utility-scale clean energy alternatives; d. Encourages the expansion and modernization of the electric grid through an interconnected system between states to optimize energy generation and cost-effectiveness; e. Further encourages the need for capacity building in developing and underdeveloped nations by sending environmentlist and climatologist experts to assist in the field; f. Assisting the ecological transistions of national work force to ease in the shifting of supply demands to a greener market; 11. Realizing innovative energy generating programs: a. Reaffirms the benefits of Carbon Sequestration to broad private companies’ collaboration on the investment of mechanisms, mainly but not limited to oil and gas related companies, in: i. Energy generation through drilling in respects to proper procedures and the environment, ii. Carbon dioxide reductions from the atmosphere, iii. Reducing the overall costs of energy generation, b. Further encourages the development of methane energy generation technology and methods, known as “landfill gas”, as a means to transform organic trash into energy by: i. Capture and trap mechanisms, ii. Drilling through pipelines that create steam turning turbi nes and activating reactors which in turns generate clean energy,
  • 9. c. Deplores the necessity to invest in the research and development of biofuels and bioethanols to elevate both its quality and quantity, as alternative means to existing fuel sources; Education and Public Awareness 12. Endorses the need to reach out to various actors to encourage agents of change in supporting nation’s efforts the path towards a greener world, by: a. Recommends the utilization of social media and prominent figures endorsements by creating new social trends to appeal to young demographics, to: i. Instill the realization to care for the earth, ii. Promote healthy and green lifestyles, iii. Encourage active participation; b. Suggests for the launch of campaigns, workshops and green programs through grass-rooted movements, in: i. Schools and universities, ii. Local environmental seminars and forums, iii. Corporation-based socialization through Corporate Social Responsibility, iv. Regional levels of governmental meetings to ensure full investment in measures to assist developing and underdeveloped countries to build their skills and knowledge base in addressing climate change challenges; c. Accepting the need to educate the public to be environmentally aware to make mise choices of consuming market products in the shifting of sustainable market demands, through: i. Media advertisements, ii. Newspaper and Magazine articles, iii. Public Service Announcements, iv. Local exhibitions; d. Proposes reaching out to UNESCO to recommend the integration of green international curriculum standards, namely: i. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (3Rs); ii. Reforestation and ongoing international efforts to combat climate change; iii. Causes and Effects of climate change;
  • 10. Adaptation on Climate Change 13. Expresses its hope for all countries to have a science based and participatory national climate risk assessment to be developed into future strategies and programs in respects to the environment and nation’s circumstances that will be realized, through: a. Emphasizing the need for disaster risk reduction, by: i. Reducing the impact of disaster on poverty eradication and economic growth, ii. Taking into consideration the impacts on all social groups especially poor and vulnerable communities; b. Approving assistance of communities to adapt, plan, facilitate programs and prepare for climate change to become climate resilient and climate sensitive, mainly through: i. Coastal resource managers, ii. Water utility managers, iii. Park rangers, iv. Other relevant actors; g. Draws attention to the importance of coastal engineering to prevent sinking isles, through the: i. The construction of dams, ii. Land reclamation and reconstruction efforts in respects to surrounding ecosystem, h. Deplores the urgency of regulating heavy duty vehicles, by recognizing the need of a continued effort to increase fuel economy standards in regards to national interests, through facilitation of public-private partnerships with: i. Foriegn and domestic investors, ii. Local entrepreneurs, iii. Government proxies, iv. Experts in the field; v.Transportation sectors; 14. Encourages the integration of the climate change agenda in the Sustainable Development Goals, such as climate-related goals on water, economy, poverty food and agriculture, health, energy, by the: a. Supporting the initiative of Sustainable Development Goals that will established in September, 2015, that replace the Millenium Development Goals;
  • 11. b. Calling for the collaboration of UN Bodies in regards to their role in realizing the upcoming Sustainable Development Goals; c. Encourages the importance of dialogues regarding environmental issues in global UN Summits to assist in easing integration; d. Deplores the need to address food security of threatened climate change affected countries by creating supply and demand cooperation between complementary countries; e. Further reaffirms the importance of protecting most vulnerable populations from the impact of climate change, by the: i. Equipment of sufficient technologies and tools as preparation, ii. Socialization of instructions to cope with emerging issues, iii. Reformation of local healthcare systems in aiding climital health issues, 15. Encourages all parties, scientists and experts, and NGOs to establish global discussion on how to build the climate resilience society in which enabling society to be able to bounce back and recover from the climate change, and the discussion should include: a. Exchange of information of success and failure in facing the climate change; b. Past and present condition and future risks of climate change; c. Ways to improve the secure livelihoods, access to education, information availability of climate change impact, healthcare facilities, social support but not limited to early-warning system, understanding vulnerabilities of all members of society, access to technology and service and quality information, as well as ensuring ecosystem be healthy and diverse. United Nations Framework on Climate Change 9 September 2015