China Daily Global Edition (USA)

‘Mass of humanity’ favors Paris pact, UN official says

- By AMY HE at the United Nations amyhe@chinadaily­usa.com

Ahead of the US announceme­nt to pull out of the Paris climate agreement, the president of the UN General Assembly said that “the great mass of humanity” will be committed to global efforts to combat climate change.

“Whatever the US decides today, the good news is that the great mass of humanity — including American citizens, by indication­s of the polls — and the great mass of internatio­nal government­s are committed to these two great agreements that we will put in place and (that are) the only way we’ll have some confidence about the future of our grandchild­ren,” said Peter Thomson.

He said that countries “did the responsibl­e thing for the future generation­s to come” in 2015 by putting in place the 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Agenda and ratifying the Paris Agreement.

“With those two agreements, our grandchild­ren have a secure future. Without implementa­tion of those, we’re in trouble,” said Thomson, speaking on Thursday at a press briefing for the upcoming UN Ocean Conference.

Wu Hongbo, under-secretary-general for UN Economic and Social Affairs, stated that “climate change is an undeniable fact. The climate change actions taken by the internatio­nal community are unstoppabl­e.”

He said that he remains optimistic about the actions that the global community will take to address climate change and its adverse effects.

Both UN officials previewed the UN Ocean Conference — running from June 5 to June 9 — that will see the participat­ion of more than 5,000 participan­ts from the public and private sectors to discuss actions to improve the state of the world’s oceans.

Heads of states, government­s, business leaders and civil society organizati­ons will focus on how to achieve Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 14, which seeks to conserve and sustainabl­y use oceans, seas and marine sources for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“Oceans do have an impact on climate. Climate change has an adverse effect on oceans,” Wu said. “From the responses from sea countries, you know how serious the adverse effects on those countries and the people on those islands are.”

Thomson said that problems with the world’s oceans are issues created by people: “It’s not stuff that’s been occurring naturally. All of these problems are created anthropoge­nically.”

 ?? AMY HE / CHINA DAILY ?? Wu Hongbo (left), undersecre­tary-general for UN Economic and Social Affairs, with Peter Thomson (center), president of the General Assembly, speak on Thursday to preview the UN World Ocean Conference next week.
AMY HE / CHINA DAILY Wu Hongbo (left), undersecre­tary-general for UN Economic and Social Affairs, with Peter Thomson (center), president of the General Assembly, speak on Thursday to preview the UN World Ocean Conference next week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States