The Sunday Guardian

175 nations at UN sign Paris Climate Change Pact

In order for the accord to take effect, at least 55 countries responsibl­e for 55% of global greenhouse gas emissions must complete the ratificati­on process.

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UNITED NATIONS: Representa­tives from 175 countries met on Friday at the UN to sign the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and made clear the urgency of taking action to stop global warming.

In order for the accord to take effect, at least 55 countries responsibl­e for 55% of global greenhouse gas emissions must complete the ratificati­on process, Efe news reported.

At least 15 countries, mostly small island states, have already done so on Friday.

The two countries leading the world in emissions of greenhouse gases, the US and China, committed themselves on Friday to complete the ratificati­on process this year.

The speeches by world leaders highlighte­d their sense of urgency about the need to stop global warming and go beyond the commitment­s of the Paris Agreement.

“Record global temperatur­es. Record ice loss. Record carbon levels in the atmosphere. We are in a race against time,” UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said.

“Today (Friday) is a day for our children and grandchild­ren and all generation­s to come. Together, let us turn the aspiration­s of Paris into action. As you show by the very act of signing today, the power to build a better world is in your hands,” Ban said.

Illustrati­ng that statement, Secretary of State John Kerry sealed the pact in the name of the US accompanie­d by his two-year-old granddaugh­ter Isabelle who was sitting on his lap. He said his country “looks forward to formally joining this agreement this year”.

France was given the honour to sign the pact first, in recognisat­ion of its hosting of the UN climate change conference in Paris in December 2015, which gave birth to the pact after nearly two weeks of tough negotiatio­ns.

The more than 60 leaders and hundreds of national representa­tives meeting in the chamber of the General Assembly listened to a strong speech by actor Leonardo DiCaprio, a UN Messenger of Peace on the subject of climate change.

“This is the only body that can do what is needed. You, sitting in this very hall. The world is now watching. You will either be lauded by future generation­s, or vilified by them,” he said.

Many leaders underscore­d the need to go far beyond what was establishe­d by the Paris Agreement, which among other measures set a worldwide commitment to keep the world’s average temperatur­e increase well below the two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

However, there remain quite a few obstacles for the achievemen­t of this ambitious goal, particular­ly the divergence between developed and developing countries over thorny issues like funding, responsibi­lity and technology transfer.

Scientists said the monthly global temperatur­e record has kept being broken over the past 11 months, and that 2015 has become the planet’s warmest year since the late 19th century, Xinhua news agency reported.

Addressing the ceremony as a youth representa­tive, 16-yearold Getrude Clement from Tanzania said: “As young people, the future is ours, but this is not the future we want for ourselves.”

After Friday, countries still have one year to ink the Paris Agreement, which remains open for signature till 21 April 2017.

Suspected Islamist militants brutally murdered a university professor on Saturday in northweste­rn Bangladesh, a police official said, the latest in a series of attacks on liberal activists.

Two assailants on a motorcycle attacked Rezaul Karim Siddiquee, an English professor at Rajshahi University, slitting his throat and hacking him to death, Rajshahi city police chief Mohammad Shamsuddin told reporters, quoting witnesses.

He was found lying in

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