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GEF projects in climate change help developing countries and economies in transition to contribute to the overall objective of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) "to achieve [...] stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system. Such a level should be achieved within a time frame sufficient to allow ecosystems to adapt naturally to climate change, to ensure that food production is not threatened and to enable economic development to proceed in a sustainable manner" (from the text of the UNFCCC, Art.2). As the financial mechanism of the UNFCCC, GEF allocates and disburses about $250 million dollars per year in projects in energy efficiency, renewable energies, and sustainable transportation. Moreover, it manages two special funds under the UNFCCC — the Least Developed Countries Fund and the Special Climate Change Fund.
Types of GEF Projects in Climate ChangeThe GEF supports projects in: Climate Change Mitigation: Reducing or avoiding greenhouse gas emissions in the areas of renewable energy, energy efficiency, and sustainable transport Climate Change Adapatation: Aiming at increasing resilience to the adverse impacts of climate change of vulnerable countries, sectors, and communities
Renewable EnergiesRenewable energy is one of the most promising substitutes for fossil fuels, which are responsible for the largest share of greenhouse gas emissions. The GEF helps countries remove barriers to developing markets for renewable energies wherever cost-effective. Such opportunities can be found in on-grid and off-grid situations, as well as in the area of renewably generated heat for industrial and other applications. In these cases, GEF support helps create enabling policy frameworks, build the capacity for understanding and using the technologies, and establish financial mechanisms to make renewables more affordable. Energy EfficiencyUsing less energy saves money, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions. Many of these win-win situations are already exploited, but there is much more to be done. The GEF promotes energy efficiency by removing barriers to the large-scale application, implementation, and dissemination of cost-effective, energy-efficient technologies and practices. Such barriers lie in the lack of conducive policies, inadequate information and awareness, and insufficient access to financing. GEF supports market transformation of energy-efficiency appliances and widespread adoption of energy-efficient technologies in industry and building sectors. Sustainable TransportationThroughout the world, the transportation sector is the fastest growing source of greenhouse gas emissions. GEF supports projects that promote a long-term shift towards low emission and sustainable forms of transportation. Eligible activities include the following: public rapid transit, which encompasses bus rapid transit, light rail transit, and trolley electric buses; transport- and traffic-demand management; non-motorized transport, and land-use planning. AdaptationThe Climate Convention guidance to the GEF on adaptation has evolved through a series of staged approaches. Originally, the GEF supported initial studies, vulnerability and adaptation assessments, and capacity building. More recently, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change asked the GEF to support pilot and demonstration projects in the field of adaptation. Under its strategic priority Piloting an Operational Approach to Adaptation, the GEF supports projects that provide real benefits and may be integrated into national policies and sustainable development planning. In addition, the GEF supports adaptation activities through the Least Developed Country Fund and the Special Climate Change Fund. New Low-GHG Energy TechnologiesIn addition to renewable energies and energy efficiency, new technologies are critical to help prevent dangerous levels of greenhouse gas emissions, while allowing for economic development. GEF provides support for such new technologies that are not yet cost effective. The current portfolio ranges from large-scale solar power plants, to distributed power generation in fuel cells, to building-integrated solar photovoltaics. Future interventions should focus on global and regional market integration and aggregation efforts, and foster national innovation. Enabling Activities, National Communications and other obligations under the UNFCCCThe GEF helps developing countries to submit national communications to the UNFCCC, including a report on national inventories of greenhouse gases. The largest part of GEF support for the national communications is delivered through an umbrella and support program administered by the United Nations Development Programme and United Nations Environment Programme. Through this umbrella program, countries can also receive support for vulnerability and adaptation assessments, capacity building, and technology needs assessments. |
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Six countries enjoy a cleaner way to chill out with help of UN agency Chiller connected to an ice rink 28 July 2009 – The United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) is launching a project in six African countries to replace ageing refrigeration systems with more energy-efficient versions and cut down on the consumption of ozone-depleting chemical compounds. The €5.3 million project aims to replace the existing chillers – the refrigeration systems that produce chilled water for cooling air in commercial, residential and industrial processes – which use chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) with newer, cleaner models. More than 460,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions could be saved every year as a result of the programme, according to a UNIDO press release issued today, and there will also be a direct phase-out of about 80 tons of CFCs needed for servicing the chillers annually. Hundreds of chillers in Cameroon, Egypt, Namibia, Nigeria, Senegal and Sudan will be overhauled under the project, which is being co-financed by the French Global Environment Facility. Kandeh K. Yumkella, UNIDO’s Director-General, said the scheme “will help remove relevant barriers and includes the transfer of green technology, the creation of a working fund mechanism, the management of CFC stockpiles, and the dissemination of awareness to chiller operators and end-users, as well as to the governments of the countries involved.” News Tracker: past stories on this issue Scientists warn of growing threat to global warming from unchecked gases – UN
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"The objective of the Summit on Climate Change, which I am convening on 22 September, is to mobilize the political will and vision needed to reach an ambitious agreed outcome based on science at the UN climate talks in Copenhagen."
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Nearly 100 world leaders accepted UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s invitation to participate in an historic Summit on Climate Change in New York on 22 September to mobilize political will and strengthen momentum for a fair, effective, and ambitious climate deal in Copenhagen this December.
“Failure to reach broad agreement in Copenhagen would be morally inexcusable, economically short-sighted and politically unwise,” the Secretary-General said in his opening address. “Now is the moment to act in common cause.”
"There is little time left. The opportunity and responsibility to avoid catastrophic climate change is in your hands," Mr. Ban said, closing the day-long Summit on Climate Change.
The Summit marked the first UN visit for the Presidents of China and the United States as well as the newly elected Prime Minister of Japan. For the complete list of speakers, please see Programme.
Read the Secretary-General´s summary of the day!
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PUBLICATIONSThe following links provide access to various United Nations documents, reports, conventions and records on climate change: Reports Conventions and Declarations Training Course UN DocumentsGeneral Assembly Economic and Social Council
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THE SECRETARY-GENERALCopenhagen presents us with an historic opportunity. Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, 27 July 2009 Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon sees first-hand the effects of climate change on melting glaciers in Antarctica. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has made addressing climate change a cornerstone of his tenure, determined to keep the issue at the top of the international agenda in the run-up to – and beyond – the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, from 7-18 December.
He has sought to advance the issue in various ways, notably by spearheading the UN-wide “Seal the Deal!” campaign to spur political and public support for a global climate agreement in Copenhagen.
To provide direction for the current negotiations – and impetus to move them forward – he is convening a Summit on climate change on 22 September, ahead of the sixty-fourth session of the General Assembly. The meeting will offer Heads of State and Government a platform for dialogue and opportunities to arrive at a political vision for a comprehensive climate deal. Dovetailing those efforts, he traveled in late August to the Arctic, a region that is warming twice as fast as the global average.
The Secretary-General also has assembled a team of four Special Envoys for Climate Change to assist him in consultations with Governments, among other key stakeholders, on how he might facilitate progress in multilateral negotiations within the United Nations. Festus Mogae, former President of Botswana, and Srgjan Kerim, former Foreign Minister of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and former President of the General Assembly (sixty-second session), have joined Gro Harlem Brundtland, former Prime Minister of Norway, and Ricardo Lagos Escobar, former President of Chile, who were appointed in 2007.
Keeping the Spotlight on Global Warming
Such initiatives are part of the Secretary-General’s broader efforts to “turn the climate crisis into a climate compact”, a message he regularly takes to the field. Climate change figured prominently in talks with senior leadership in China and Mongolia, during his July 2009 visit to those countries. In China, he participated in various climate change-related events, and in Mongolia, spent time in communities that face water shortages and desertification. Mr. Ban’s historic trip to Antarctica in November, 2007 – the first such official visit undertaken by a Secretary-General – drew attention to the effects of climate change on the frozen continent and the importance of safeguarding the planet’s future. While there, he was briefed by scientists at a Chilean Air Force base before visiting the Collins Glaciers and the Sejong Research Centre. Secretary-General participates in Joint Press Conference At the 2007 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali, Indonesia, he emphasized that climate change is as much an opportunity as it is a threat, offering a chance to usher in a new age of green economics.
Throughout his work, the Secretary-General has called on world leaders to embrace the climate challenge, and underscored that the costs of inaction – in ecological, human and financial terms – far outweigh the costs of action now. The High-level Event on Climate Change– entitled The Future in Our Hands: Addressing the Leadership Challenge of Climate Change – convened by the Secretary-General on 24 September 2007 spurred action to launch negotiations in Bali in December of that year. More than 70 Heads of State and Government attended the event, sending a signal of their determination to act decisively going forward.
High-Level meeting on Climate Change
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