LONDON:
The
20 biggest world economies today agreed in St Petersburg, Russia to use
the resources of the Montreal Protocol to get rid of a significant
group of super greenhouse gases (GHG).
The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) welcomes a landmark
statement and encourages all countries to join the G20 in supporting a
global phase-down of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) under the Montreal
Protocol – the international ozone treaty.
After
a summer of record high temperatures in many parts of the world, global
leaders have taken an important first step towards mitigating one of
the main gases responsible
for climate change. HFCs are thousands of times more potent than carbon
dioxide (CO2). HFCs are primarily used in refrigeration and
air conditioning despite that climate-friendly alternatives are already
available.
“Given the international
community’s success
in effectively and rapidly phasing out ozone-depleting chemicals, we
are encouraged that the world’s largest economies have agreed to phase
down HFCs under the Montreal Protocol,” said
Mark W. Roberts, EIA’s Senior Counsel and International Policy Advisor. “We strongly urge the rest of the world to join the members
of the G20 in phasing down these super greenhouse gases.”
Micronesia,
along with the United States, Canada and Mexico have continually, for
the past five years, have put forward amendments to the Montreal
Protocol to include a phase
down of HFCs. However, global action on phasing-down HFCs has stalled
due to countries disagreeing over whether a phase-down should occur
under the Montreal Protocol or the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
The
G20 statement resolves this debate by asserting that the phase down of
the consumption and production of HFCs will take place under the
Montreal Protocol, while the emission
reductions will be accounted for under the UNFCCC.
“Phasing
out HFCs is the fastest, most cost-effective climate mitigation measure
available and joint global action on HFCs will set an example of how
the nations of the world
can come together to solve the problem of climate change,” said EIA
Senior Campaigner Clare Perry.
In addition to the statement by the G20 leaders, the US and China reaffirmed their
June 8, 2013 agreement on HFCs and “emphasize[d]
the importance of the Montreal Protocol, including as a next step
through the establishment
of an open-ended contact group to consider all relevant issues,
including financial and technology support to Article 5 developing
countries, cost-effectiveness, safety of substitutes, environmental
benefits, and an amendment.”
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