Yahoo – AFP,
October 24, 2017
Managua (AFP) - Nicaragua signed the Paris climate agreement Monday, leaving the United States and Syria as the only two holdouts on the global climate pact.
Managua (AFP) - Nicaragua signed the Paris climate agreement Monday, leaving the United States and Syria as the only two holdouts on the global climate pact.
The
government of President Daniel Ortega said the global 2015 pact represented
"the only international instrument that offers the conditions to face
global warming and its effects," according to a statement read out by Vice
President Rosario Murillo.
Monday's
announcement leaves the United States and Syria as the only countries holding
out on the Paris deal, which set measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to
prevent temperatures rising by more than two degrees.
US
President Donald Trump in June announced the start of a three-year process to
pull out of the agreement on the grounds that it would put the US at an
economic disadvantage.
Ortega said
last week that Nicaragua would sign the pact, but did not say when.
The tiny
central American country had previously refused to sign the agreement on the
grounds that it did not go far enough to combat global warming.
"We
welcome Nicaragua's announcement, which further underscores the commitment of
the international community to take full responsibility for our shared
planet," said Elliott Harris, assistant secretary-general of the UN
environment program.
"We
must all continue to step up our individual and collective efforts to face
climate change, one of the greatest challenges of our time."
Weather
threat
In
September, the leftist Ortega announced during a private meeting with World
Bank directors in Managua that his country would join the agreement, but the
news was later removed from the official government website without
explanation.
In its
statement announcing the decision Nicaragua noted the dangers of more frequent
natural disasters with "high costs, loss of lives and increasing material
damage."
The Central
American country's move to join the pact comes just weeks after tropical storm
Nate struck the region, highlighting the vulnerability of Nicaragua and its
neighbors to the effects of climate change.
The storm
unleashed heavy rains that triggered floods and mudslides, cutting a path of
destruction that flattened houses and destroyed roads and bridges.
Nate left
at least 32 in Central America, 15 of them in Nicaragua, the hardest hit.
The
Nicaraguan environmental organization Centro Humboldt praised its country's
move to join the global pact.
"We
applaud this decision," the organization's director, Victor Campos, told
AFP. "We had asked them to support the accord and we are very happy with
the decision."
He said the
government must now define how Nicaragua will participate, and his organization
plans to urge developing a national plan concerning climate change.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.