Global Climate Action Summit Commitments Increase Bottom-up Pressure to Raise Global Climate Ambition

SAN FRANCISCO – At this week’s Global Climate Action Summit, leaders from business, local governments and civil society committed to more than 500 actions and detailed new plans to work together to reduce global emissions. The Summit concluded with a call to national governments to increase climate ambition to secure a climate-safe future for all.


“The momentum toward bold action at the next round of UN climate talks accelerated this week,” said Manuel Pulgar-Vidal, leader of WWF’s global climate and energy practice, and Summit advisory committee member. “Scores of businesses and local governments stepped up to address the climate challenge. Now, national governments can arrive in Poland with the wind at their backs, giving them the courage to commit to even greater emissions reductions that move us closer to a 1.5-degree future.”


Under the banner of the 30x30 Forest, Food and Land Challenge, WWF and an alliance of over 100 NGOs, businesses, state and local governments, indigenous groups and local communities issued 17 commitments to advance the forest, food and land agenda. Land - and how we use it - is the second largest source of emissions, but can deliver up to 30% of the climate solutions needed to meet the Paris targets. The new commitments help improve food systems, enhance the restoration, conservation and resilience of natural and working lands, and unlock new financing and technology for the sector.


Key announcements include:

  • Through the Pacific Coast Collaborative, states and cities on the United States’ West Coast committed to reduce food loss and waste by 50% by 2030, a commitment with the potential to reduce 25 million tons of GHG emissions per year from the often-overlooked food sector.
  • Walmart announced the development of a platform that will help its suppliers engage with local leaders in different jurisdictions to stop deforestation and reduce carbon emissions in their supply chain. As an example of how the platform will work, Unilever is committing to support better production and forest protection efforts in Sabah, Malaysia, where palm oil is driving deforestation.
  • The Global Environment Facility announced half a billion US dollars in funding to drive improved land use and forest conservation, and nine of the world’s leading philanthropic foundations announced their intent to commit at least $459 million through 2022 to Forests, Indigenous Rights, and Lands to Combat Climate Change.
  • Seventeen states in the U.S. Climate Alliance Natural and Working Lands Initiative has committed to inventory all land-based greenhouse gas emissions and to identify sequestration opportunities on a path to setting state-wide sequestration targets.
  • Danone and WWF have committed to work with the Science Based Targets Initiative to build a pipeline of more companies with land-intensive footprints to set science based targets.

“This is the week local action delivered for global impact. It’s clear that local governments and private sector leaders are now driving the climate transition at a level that can keep US targets within reach,” said Lou Leonard, WWF-US’ senior vice president for climate change and energy. “The actions of US business, mayors and governors are demonstrating to the rest of the world that despite Washington’s rhetoric, Americans still stand behind the promise of the Paris Agreement.”


During the summit, US leaders sent a strong signal of progress. Since April, nearly 500 members of the We Are Still In coalition submitted plans and detailed 300 new commitments to increase climate action. Fifty commitments related to renewable energy and electric vehicles, and several include plans to collaborate across sectors. A further sixty members pledge to work with coalition partners to embrace renewable energy and energy efficiency.


Globally, newly-established climate coalitions in Japan and Mexico urged the creation of new efforts to unite subnational actors in other countries, including Colombia, South Africa, Argentina and Japan, and offered to work together with national governments to accelerate climate action and leverage domestic opportunities to enhance climate ambition.

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About the Global Climate Action Summit: The Global Climate Action Summit is taking place from September 12 to 14, 2018 in San Francisco under the theme 'Taking Ambition to the Next Level.' To keep warming well below 2 degrees C, and ideally 1.5 degrees C – temperatures that could lead to catastrophic consequences – worldwide emissions must start trending down by 2020. The Summit will showcase climate action around the world, along with bold new commitments, to give world leaders the confidence they need to go even further by 2020 to meet the Paris Climate Agreement goals. The Summit’s five headline challenge areas are Healthy Energy Systems; Inclusive Economic Growth; Sustainable Communities; Land and Ocean Stewardship and Transformative Climate Investments. Many partners are supporting the Summit and the mobilization in advance including Climate Group; the Global Covenant of Mayors; Ceres, the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group; BSR; We Mean Business; CDP, formerly the Carbon Disclosure Project; WWF; and Mission 2020. For more information, www.globalclimateactionsummit.org. #StepUp2018