Germany`s Commitment To Paris Agreement

Autor: Marjian

The preamble also reaffirms Germany`s 2010 climate targets (see table) and the commitment to the 2016 Paris Agreement. [b] German politicians, climate activists, scientists and the media celebrated the Paris agreement on the “historic” climate. Some professional associations and activists pointed out the shortcomings of the agreement and most commentators agreed on the need for action. The result is a collection of reactions from Germany. Read the article here. By comparison, the National Paris Agreement (NDC) for Germany is 55% compared to 1990 (which corresponds to the last cell in the table). [5] The German Climate Change Plan 2050 is a climate policy document adopted by the federal government on 14 November 2016. [1] The plan outlines measures to enable Germany to meet its various national targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 (see table) and to meet its international commitments under the 2016 Paris climate agreement. The federal Department of Environment, Nature Protection, Construction and Safety of Reactors (BMUB), under the leadership of Minister Barbara Hendricks, led the development of the plan. The plan was gradually watered down due to the first leak of a project in early May 2016. The Environment Ministry`s September 2016 forecast indicates that Germany is likely to miss its 2020 climate target. [2] In the 2013 coalition agreement It says: “In Germany, we intend to codify the new reduction measures in the light of the European targets and the results of the 2015 Paris climate conference until we reach the 80-95% target by 2050 and submit them as part of a broad process of dialogue on measures (climate action plan).” Germany has set ambitious climate targets. The 2050 Climate Protection Plan adopted by the federal cabinet at the end of 2016 demonstrated in particular the federal government`s commitment to combating climate change with an ambitious climate policy.

The 2050 climate action plan highlights Germany`s strategy for implementing the Paris Agreement. The goal of global greenhouse gas neutrality by 2050 is at the heart of the plan. The objectives of the Paris Agreement are the starting point for this vision for 2050. The agreement stipulates that global greenhouse gas neutrality must be achieved by the second half of the century. Another goal of the Paris agreement is to keep global warming well below two degrees Celsius or even below 1.5 degrees. On 7 November 2016, more than 40 German companies, including energy suppliers EnBW and MVV Energie, as well as network operator 50Hertz, and Commerzbank, Deutsche Telekom, IKEA and Hochtief, pledged to implement a more ambitious programme to ensure compliance with the obligations arising from the Paris Agreement. Companies want sectoral emissions targets for 2030 and find that “this is the only way to develop new economic models and concrete decarbonization plans.”

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