Mexico's Patricia Espinosa, a former foreign minister
appointed on Wednesday to head the Bonn-based U.N. Climate
Change Secretariat from July, urged all governments swiftly to
ratify the 195-nation accord hammered out in Paris in December.
She told Reuters that "it's not impossible" that the agreement,
seeking to transform the global economy away from fossil fuels
this century, could enter into force as early as this year,
giving it strength in international law.
Espinosa is at odds with Trump, who is skeptical that man-made
emissions cause climate change. He told Reuters on Tuesday that
he was "not a big fan" of the Paris accord and that "at a
minimum I will be renegotiating those agreements".
Asked about Trump's threat, Espinosa said the Paris deal was a
hard-won compromise by more than 190 nations. "It would not be
easy for anybody to just say 'I want to renegotiate this'," she
said.
Nations who agreed in Paris range from top greenhouse gas
emitters China and the United States, small island nations
fearful of rising sea levels and OPEC members who depend on
income from oil.
Renegotiation "is really not a scenario that in a multilateral
process you can see as something feasible," she added.
Espinosa said she would be "respectful of everybody who has a
role to play in any country" but at the same time seek to build
momentum for action. Many other backers of the accord have
expressed dismay at Trump's call.
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The Paris Agreement will enter into force once 55 nations
responsible for 55 percent of global emissions formally ratify the
deal.
So far, 16 nations have ratified, accounting for just 0.03 percent
of emissions. Many nations, including China and the United States
which together represent 38 percent of emissions, say they will join
this year.
Espinosa, 57 and now Mexico's ambassador to Germany, will succeed
Christiana Figueres of Costa Rica, who is stepping down after six
years.
Espinosa said she also will seek to link action to curb climate
change to all aspects of development in coming years.
She agreed with Figueres, who has said governments will have to
toughen existing pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions to limit a
rise in temperatures linked to more droughts, floods and rising
seas.
"I think it's possible but very difficult, not reachable with the
commitments we have on the table," Espinosa said of the toughest
goal in the Paris Agreement, to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius
(2.7 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times.
(Reporting By Alister Doyle, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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