The document summarizes the key points of the Paris Climate Change Agreement signed in 2016. It discusses the major goals of the agreement, which include limiting global temperature rise to below 2 degrees Celsius, achieving a universal climate agreement, and helping poorer nations reduce their emissions. The presentation also outlines some of the major issues with implementing the agreement, such as setting greenhouse gas reduction targets and transitioning to carbon neutral economies by 2050. Several of the largest emitting countries that have not yet signed on to the agreement are also identified.
3. Paul Young - Presenter
Bio
β’ CPA/CGA
β’ 25 years of experience in Academia, Industry and Financial solutions
β’ Youtube Channel -
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAArky1bAXPSuV2NLtUnyLg
5. What is Paris Climate Accord
The COP21 climate conference brought together scores of countries
and tens of thousands of people to answer one pressing question: How
can we keep global temperatures from rising too high? After two weeks
of debate, they left with an ambitious deal to put the world on a
serious carbon diet, and on April 22 about 160 countries are expected
to finally sign it.
6. Major Issues
β’ Limit temperature rise 'well below' 2 C
β’ First universal climate agreement
β’ Helping poorer nations
β’ Publishing greenhouse gas reduction targets Carbon neutral by
2050?
7. Worldβs largest emittersβ’ Saudi Arabia, with almost 1.2 percent of global emissions leads the list of
the five OPEC nations and two other Middle Eastern states currently not
confirmed to attend the event. The countryβs minister for Petroleum and
Mineral Resources Ali Al-Naimi indicated in 2015 that Saudi Arabia would
have to stop using fossil fuels at some point.
β’ Despite this the country faced accusations of trying to wreck the climate
deal at the Paris COP21 climate conference. The Guardian reported that
Wael Hmaidan, director of Climate Action Network, said they were
βundermining the position of other Arab countries.β
β’ Meanwhile, Africaβs largest economy, Nigeria, is a major oil exporter and
the second largest OPEC member who may not put pen to paper
tomorrow. The country significantly out-emits the other African non-
signatories, with 0.66 percent of global annual emissions.
β’ Ecuador, one of the smallest OPEC members is the only South American
country that hasnβt indicated it will sign.
β’ Others include Iraq with more than 0.5 percent of global emissions, Qatar
and non-OPEC countries Syria and Yemen, with emissions between 0.2
percent and 0.05 percent of the global total.
8. Issues/Carbon Free
β’ Planning for a zero-carbon economy by mid-century demands long lead times,
decades even, because it involves major decisions about power plants and
transmission lines, building codes and vehicle standards, Sachs said. But most
countries were still not looking as far down the road as 2050 β including the US.
Obama, despite a flurry of climate initiatives since 2013, had yet to produce a
coherent long-term plan for a 21st-century post-carbon economy, Sachs said.
β’ Countries that wait until 2030, the date envisaged in the Paris agreement, they
would have to cut global emissions by 6% a year to keep the 2c goal in sight. βThe
longer we wait for effective climate policy, the more severe and the more traumatic
will be the emissions reductions in the future,β he said.
β’ Slow economic growth
β’ World is growing at 3.1 to 3.4%
β’ New tax/pricing will not help growth, but could lead to stagnation and loss of output
β’ Carbon replacement
β’ Steel is part of Wind Turbines
β’ Steel is part of the mining of resources, like Vanadium and Lithium
β’ Solar Panels require Silicon wafer (mining)
β’ Cell Phones are made up plastics (petrochemicals)
9. Other Sources:
β’ Foreign Aid - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMAkt0h0X2g
β’ Clean Technology -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2MKGzGuoEM
β’ Clean Technology -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdMwQ7QsNcI