"We are not here to talk, we are here to
make history," Ban told the opening ceremony of his much-anticipated
Climate Summit, billed as the largest-ever gathering on climate change,
in the General Assembly Hall.
"We need a clear shared vision. The
human, environmental, and financial cost of climate change is fast
becoming unbearable," Ban said.
Many of the more than 120 Heads of States
and Government, business, finance and civil society representatives are
expected to announce commitments that will reduce emissions, enhance
resistance to climate change and mobilise financing for climate action.
"I am asking you to lead," Ban said. "We
must cut emissions. Science says they must peak by 2020 and decline
sharply thereafter. By the end of this century we must be carbon
neutral."
Underscoring the importance of climate
change as the defining issue of our age, Ban noted that the
international community's response today will define the future.
He said he has urged governments to
commit to a meaningful, universal climate agreement in Paris in 2015,
and to do their fair share to limit global temperature rise to less than
two degrees Celsius.
"To do that, we must work together to
mobilise money and move markets. Let us invest in the climate solutions
available to us today. Economists have shown that this comes at minimal
extra cost, while the benefits to our people and our planet are
monumental," he added.
Ban said that all public finance
institutions need to step up to the challenge. "And we need to bring
private finance from the sidelines. We must begin to capitalise the
Green Climate Fund.
And we must meet the broader 100 billion
dollar-a-year pledge made in Copenhagen. Let us also put a price on
carbon. There is no more powerful way to drive the market transformation
we need," he said.
India's Environment Minister Prakash
Javadekar had said in New Delhi that India would raise the issue of the
Green Climate Fund in the climate summit, stressing that the fund now
has to materialise.
Each of the last three decades has been
successively warmer at the earth's surface than any other decade since
1850, noted the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Chairperson, Rajendra Pachauri.
Source: News in Hindi and Newspaper
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