In an
effort to combat climate change, representatives of nearly 200 countries
meeting in Rwanda have agreed to limit the use of HFC gases commonly used in
refrigeration.
Deutsche Welle, 15 Oct 2016
A majority
of the world's nations meeting in Rwanda agreed on Saturday to a wide-reaching
global deal on reducing greenhouse gases which are used in refrigerators and
air conditioners.
"The
amendment and decisions are adopted," Rwanda's Minister of Natural
Resources Vincent Biruta announced to loud cheers, following overnight talks in
the country's capital Kigali.
The deal on
limiting the use of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) divides countries into three
groups with differing deadlines to scale back on the use of the factory-made
gas, which can be 10,000 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.
According
to the pact, developed nations including the United States - the world's second
worst polluter - and many European countries will gradually reduce their HFC
emissions by 2019.
A second
group of over 100 developing nations, including China - the world's top
polluter - will start reducing in 2024.
A third,
smaller group of countries including India, Pakistan and some Gulf states will
start later in 2028, after arguing that their economies need more time to grow.
The date is three years earlier than India had first proposed.
A test of
global will
The talks
on HFCs have been viewed as a first test of global resolve since the ParisAgreement was reached last year. A sufficient number of countries ratified the
agreement earlier this month and it will come into effect in November.
"This
is a huge win for the climate. We have taken a major concrete step in
delivering on the promises we made in Paris last December," said Miguel
Arias Canete, a commissioner with the European Union in a statement ahead of
the agreement's adoption.
Negotiating
countries were embroiled in a debate on how quickly to phase out HFCs. The US,
who was led by Secretary of State John Kerry, and other Western countries
pushed for quick action, while other countries such as India asked for more
time for their economies to adjust.
Many African
nations and small island states also urged for quick action, saying their
countries face the biggest threat from climate change.
"It
may not be entirely what the islands wanted, but it is a good deal," the
minister-in-assistance to the president of the Marshall Islands, Mattlan
Zackhras, said in a statement.
"We
all know we must go further, and we will go further."
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Infografik How ozone-deplenting substances and greenhouse gases affect the atmosphere |
The
dangerous greenhouse gas
Environmental
groups hoped that Saturday's deal could reduce global warming by a half-degree
Celsius by the end of this century.
Changing to
HFC alternatives such as ammonia, water or other gases called
hydrofluoroolefins, however, could be expensive for developing countries with
extreme summer temperatures.
HFCs were
first introduced in the 1990s to replace chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) after
scientists realized they were destroying the ozone layer. The level in the
upper stratosphere protects Earth from the Sun's harmful rays.
However,
HFCs turned out to be catastrophic for global warming. Although they are safe
for the ozone layer, they are thousands of times worse for trapping heat than
carbon dioxide.
rs/kl (AP, AFP,
Reuters)
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