At the UN Climate Change Conference in Doha, Qatar  (COP18/CMP8), governments have taken the next essential step in the global  response to climate change. Countries have successfully launched a new commitment period  under the Kyoto Protocol, agreed a firm timetable to adopt a universal climate  agreement by 2015 and agreed a path to raise necessary ambition to respond to  climate change. They also endorsed the completion of new institutions and agreed  ways and means to deliver scaled-up climate finance and technology to developing  countries.
“Doha has opened up a new gateway to bigger ambition and to greater action – the Doha Climate Gateway. Qatar is proud to have been able to bring governments here to achieve this historic task. I thank all governments and ministers for their work to achieve this success. Now governments must move quickly through the Doha Climate Gateway to push forward with the solutions to climate change,” said COP President Abdullah bin Hamad Al-Attiyah.
The Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on  Climate Change (UNFCCC), Christiana Figueres called on countries to swiftly  implement what has been agreed in Doha so that the world can stay below the  internationally agreed maximum two degrees Celsius temperature rise. 
“I congratulate the Qatar Presidency for managing a complex and  challenging conference. Now, there is much work to do. Doha is another step in  the right direction, but we still have a long road ahead. The door to stay below  two degrees remains barely open. The science shows it, the data proves it,” said  Ms Figueres. 
“The UN Climate Change negotiations must now focus on the concrete ways and means to accelerate action and ambition. The world has the money and technology to stay below two degrees. After Doha, it is a matter of scale, speed, determination and sticking to the timetable,” she said.
In Doha, governments also successfully concluded work under the  Convention that began in Bali in 2007 and ensured that remaining elements of  this work will be continued under the UN Climate Change process.
The next major UN Climate Change Conference – COP19/ CMP9 - will take place in Warsaw, Poland, at the end of 2013.
The results of COP18/CMP8 in more detail 
1) Amendment of the Kyoto Protocol  
The Kyoto Protocol, as the only existing and binding agreement under which developed countries commit to cutting greenhouse gases, has been amended so that it will continue as of 1 January 2013.
- Governments have decided that  the length of the second commitment period will be 8 years. 
- The legal requirements that will  allow a smooth continuation of the Protocol have been agreed. 
- The valuable accounting rules of  the protocol have been preserved. 
- Countries that are taking on  further commitments under the Kyoto Protocol have agreed to review their  emission reduction commitments at the latest by 2014, with a view to increasing  their respective levels of ambition. 
- The Kyoto Protocol’s Market  Mechanisms – the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), Joint Implementation (JI)  and International Emissions Trading (IET) – can continue as of 2013. 
- Access to the mechanisms will be  uninterrupted for all developed countries that have accepted targets for the  second commitment period. 
- JI will continue to operate,  with the agreed technical rules allowing the issuance of credits, once a host  country's emissions target has been formally established. 
- Australia, the EU, Japan, Lichtenstein, Monaco and  Switzerland have declared that they will not carry over any surplus emissions  trading credits (Assigned Amounts) into the second commitment period of the  Kyoto Protocol. 
2) Time table for the 2015 global climate change  agreement and increasing ambition before 2020 
- Governments have agreed to speedily work toward a universal  climate change agreement covering all countries from 2020, to be adopted by  2015, and to find ways to scale up efforts before 2020 beyond the existing  pledges to curb emissions so that the world can stay below the agreed maximum 2  degrees Celsius temperature rise. 
- A significant number of meetings  and workshops are to be held in 2013 to prepare the new agreement and to explore  further ways to raise ambition. 
- Governments have agreed to  submit to the UN Climate Change Secretariat, by 1 March 2013, information, views  and proposals on actions, initiatives and options to enhance ambition. 
- Elements of a negotiating text  are to be available no later than the end of 2014, so that a draft negotiating  text is available before May 2015. 
In Doha, the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced he  would convene world leaders in 2014 to mobilize the political will to help  ensure the 2015 deadline is met. 
3) Completion of  new infrastructure 
- In Doha, governments significantly advanced the completion of  new infrastructure to channel technology and finance to developing nations and  move toward the full implementation of this infrastructure and support. Most  importantly, they have: 
- endorsed the selection of the  Republic of Korea as the location of the Green Climate Fund and the work plan of  the Standing Committee on Finance. The Green Climate Fund is expected to start  its work in Sondgo in the second half of 2013, which means that it can launch  activities in 2014. 
- confirmed a UNEP-led consortium as host of the Climate  Technology Center (CTC), for an initial term of five years. The CTC, along with  its associated Network, is the implementing arm of the UNFCCCs Technology  Mechanism. Governments have also agreed the constitution of the CTC advisory  board. 
4) Long-term climate finance 
- Developed countries have  reiterated their commitment to deliver on promises to continue long-term climate  finance support to developing nations, with a view to mobilizing 100 billion USD  both for adaptation and mitigation by 2020. 
- The agreement also encourages  developed countries to increase efforts to provide finance between 2013-15 at  least to the average annual level with which they provided funds during the  2010-2012 fast-start finance period. This is to ensure there is no gap in  continued finance support while efforts are otherwise scaled up. 
- Governments will continue a work  programme on long-term finance during 2013 under two co-chairs to contribute to  the on-going efforts to scale up mobilization of climate finance and report to  the next COP on pathways to reach that target. 
- Germany, the UK, France, Denmark, Sweden and the EU  Commission announced concrete finance pledges in Doha for the period up to 2015,  totaling approximately 6 billion USD. 
Other key outcomes of COP18/CMP8 in Doha 
Review 
- Governments have launched a robust process to review the  long-term temperature goal. This will start in 2013 and conclude by 2015, and is  a reality check on the advance of the climate change threat and the possible  need to mobilize further action. 
Adaptation 
- Governments have identified ways to further strengthen the adaptive capacities of the most vulnerable, also through better planning.
- A pathway has been established towards concrete institutional  arrangements to provide the most vulnerable populations with better protection  against loss and damage caused by slow onset events such as rising sea levels.  
- Ways to implement National Adaptation Plans for least  developed countries have been agreed, including linking funding and other  support 
Support of developing country action 
- Governments have completed a  registry to record developing country mitigation actions that seek recognition  or financial support. The registry will be a flexible, dynamic, web-based  platform. 
- A new work programme to build capacity through climate change  education and training, create public awareness and enable the public to  participate in climate change decision-making has been agreed in Doha. This is  important to create a groundswell of support for embarking on a new climate  change regime after 2020 
New market mechanisms 
- A work programme has been agreed  to further elaborate the new market-based mechanism under the UNFCCC, and also  sets out possible elements for its operation. 
- A work programme to develop a framework for recognizing  mechanisms established outside the UNFCCC, such as nationally-administered or  bilateral offset programmes, and to consider their role in helping countries to  meet their mitigation targets, has also been agreed. 
Actions on forests 
- In Doha, governments have further clarified ways to measure  deforestation, and to ensure that efforts to fight deforestation are supported.  
Carbon Capture and Storage 
- Governments meeting in Doha have looked at ways to ensure the  effectiveness and environmental integrity of projects under the Kyoto Protocol’s  Clean Development Mechanism that capture and store carbon emissions 
Development and transfer of technology 
- Countries have taken forward work on enabling the development  and transfer of technologies that can help developing countries adapt and curb  their emissions. 
Avoiding negative consequences of climate action  
- In some cases, the implementation of actions that reduce  emissions could result in negative economic or social consequences for other  countries. In Doha, governments discussed measures to address such consequences  in a special forum.
Source: Doha 2012
Source: Doha 2012
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