Travel

Travel

Travel With WWF

Visit our travel section and choose from many amazing trips! Learn more

Support WWF

WWF will receive a $100 contribution from Bank of America for each new qualifying WWF Visa Signature® credit card from Bank of America. *

* See application for details.

Press Release

WWF, Other NGOs Draft Benchmark Copenhagen Climate Treaty


For Release: Jun 09, 2009
Joe Pouliot
joe.pouliot@wwfus.org
202-476-9919

BONN, GERMANY, June 8, 2009 – Climate change experts from leading non-governmental organizations today unveiled their blueprint for a legally binding Copenhagen agreement. This will serve as the benchmark for governments negotiating a new climate deal this year and shows how major differences between rich and poor nations can be overcome.

The 160-page “Copenhagen Climate Treaty”, which will be distributed to negotiators from 192 states, took some of the world’s most experienced climate NGOs almost a year to write and contains a full legal text covering all the main elements needed to provide the world with a fair and ambitious agreement that keeps climate change impacts below the unacceptable risk levels identified by most scientists.

“This is the first time in history that a coalition of civil society groups has taken such a step. Together we have produced the most coherent legal document to date showing balanced and credible climate solutions based on equity and science,” said Kim Carstensen, head of WWF’s Global Climate Initiative.

The document describes the path the world must be on to avoid catastrophic climate change, recognizing that global temperature increase must be kept well below 2 degrees Celsius. It sets a global cap on emissions – a carbon budget – and explains in detail how both industrialized and developing countries can contribute to the safety of the planet and its people, according to their means and responsibilities and shows how the poorest and most vulnerable on the planet can be protected and compensated.

“We have put protection of the climate and therefore the planet and its people at the heart of this Treaty and we should expect and demand no less of our governments,” said Martin Kaiser of Greenpeace International. “All that is needed now is political will and the ‘cut and paste’ feature to produce the agreement the world is waiting for.”

Adaptation is another key component of the Treaty outlining an Adaptation Action Framework which includes grants, insurance and compensation for the most vulnerable countries.

“Help for the poor and vulnerable to deal with the climate impacts that are unavoidable is crucial. Without a strong, effective deal in Copenhagen we could also be looking at more resource wars, disruption, refugees and natural catastrophes in the very near future,” said Wael Hmaidan, IndyACT.

The Treaty calls for a legally binding agreement consisting of three parts: the Kyoto Protocol updated to strengthen industrialized country obligations; a new Copenhagen Protocol that has legally binding commitments for the USA and sets out low carbon pathways for developing countries, supported by the industrialized world; and a set of decisions that lays the groundwork for the next three years.

The “Copenhagen Climate Treaty” was drafted by Greenpeace, WWF, IndyACT – the League of Independent Activists, Germanwatch, David Suzuki Foundation, National Ecological Centre of Ukraine and expert individuals from around the world.

Notes to Editors:
The Copenhagen Climate Treaty includes:

  • The annual global carbon budget in 2020 from all sources of greenhouse gases
    (not counting those controlled by the Montréal Protocol) would be no higher than 36.1 Gt CO2e, bringing emissions down to roughly1990 levels and would need to be reduced to 7.2 Gt CO2e in 2050, in other words by 80% below 1990 levels.
  • A design proposal for a new institution – the Copenhagen Climate Facility - to manage the processes for emissions cuts, adaptation and forest protection under the new global treaty.
  • A recipe for long-term action plans for both developed countries (Zero Carbon Action Plans, ZCAPs) and developing countries (Low Carbon Action Plans, LCAPs).
  • Binding targets for Newly Industrialized Countries (NICs) like Singapore, South Korea and Saudi Arabia in line with the Convention principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities.

The treaty is available online: http://www.worldwildlife.org/climate/ngoclimatetreaty.html.

To arrange an interview with Kim Carstensen or other experts, please contact Joe Pouliot at joe.pouliot@wwfus.org or 202-476-9919. 

 

Other WWF Sites
   Please leave this field empty

Click the globe to explore WWF's work

WWF's Vision


President and CEO Carter Roberts sets the vision for WWF, to save a planet, a world of life.

Read more about Carter and his vision for WWF.

An organization based on trust

Co-Chairmen of the Board Larry Linden and Roger Sant hold WWF accountable for best practices in governance, accountability and transparency at all levels of the organization.

Read more about WWF and governance.

How Our Funds Support Conservation

82 percent of WWF's spending is directed to worldwide conservation activities

Read more

Deep History in Conservation

Since 1961, WWF has been achieving results in conservation around the globe

Read WWF's history

Experts in Conservation


As director of TRAFFIC North America, a regional office of the world's largest international wildlife trade monitoring program, Crawford Allan works to combat the illegal trade in wildlife and minimize negative impacts from legal trade.

Meet WWF's experts

Take Action

Take action through WWF's Conservation Action Network, where you can speak out for wildlife and wild places around the globe.

Read more

Donate Today

Make your New Year's resolution

Make your New Year's resolution today to protect the future of nature. Become a monthly supporter of WWF.

WWF