European regions sign up to pact on climate change action

by ClickGreen staff. Published Fri 21 Oct 2011 17:43
Regions sign up to declaration for climate change action
Regions sign up to declaration for climate change action

European regions today signed up to the “Lyon Declaration of Regions for Climate Action”, which calls upon the international community to act on climate change and commits sub-national governments to take ambitious actions within their own area of influence.

The Declaration was signed at the end of the European Conference of Regions on Climate Change, jointly organised by the government of the Rhone-Alpes region, the Network of Regional Governments for Sustainable Development (nrg4SD) and The Climate Group.

The declaration was signed by: Jean-Jack Queyranne, President of the Regional Council of the Rhone-Alpes region, Mark Kenber, CEO, The Climate Group and Lluís Recoder i Miralles, Minister for Territory and Sustainability of Catalonia, Co-Chair of nrg4SD, and representatives of the participating Regions.

The 'Lyon Declaration of Regions for Climate Action ' provides a roadmap for further cooperation between the European regions. It acknowledges the urgency of cutting greenhouse gas emissions and, drawing on a constructive debate on how to accelerate the shift to a prosperous low carbon economy during the conference, outlines a voluntary political framework to that effect that builds on the efforts regions are already making.

The declaration calls upon international climate negotiators to sustain their efforts for a global agreement that will address the problem of climate change. It also highlights the role of sub-national governments, their commitment to concrete action, their support for the Clean Revolution and the importance of decentralised cooperation.

The Declaration continues the long-standing engagement of nrg4SD and The Climate Group with sub-national governments for a Clean Revolution towards a sustainable, low-carbon society, and of the region Rhone-Alpes as one of the leading members of both organisations.

“The European Regions and Federated States haven’t waited to reduce their GHG emissions and to prepare their territories to climate impacts, as we have been showing in Rhone-Alpes since 2004 by installing an Eco Region," underlined Jean-Jack Queyranne, President of the Rhone-Alpes Region. “Through this declaration, we are today speaking with one voice about the climate solutions already implemented and the future challenges to still overcome.”

Lluís Recoder i Miralles, co-chair of nrg4SD and Minister for Territory and Sustainability, Catalonia, added: “In the last years, sub-national governments have concretely shown that they take their climate change responsibilities in a more proactive way than ever before. In fact, their accomplishments in this area have grown tremendously in sophistication and effectiveness.

“The Declaration we are signing today demonstrates that the important lessons being learned at sub-national level can often feed into and improve national policy and shape more ambitious and innovative responses to climate change. This is why we believe that the revenues originated from CO2 auctioning should be allocated to climate action and more financial means given to sub-national governments to deploy climate initiatives.”

Mark Kenber, CEO, The Climate Group, says: “The Clean Revolution is already underway and states and regions around the world are at the forefront of this growing global movement.

“The Climate Group has worked closely with the regions in its International States and Regions Alliance and applaudes the Lyon Declaration. The conference, which has highlighted the many exciting initiatives that are taking place around Europe, and the accompanying commitments in the Lyon Declaration, demonstrate that sub-national governments will continue to be the drivers of the transition to a prosperous, low-carbon society.”

The Declaration was presented to high-level representatives of the European Commission and the UN. It will be taken to the International Climate Conference in Durban in South Africa (COP 17) to reaffirm the role of European regions in addressing climate change, and used in the run-up to the Rio+20 Summit next year.

The signing followed a day of in-depth exchanges between about 350 European and international participants from sub-national and local governments, business and civil society on the three work streams of sustainable transport, energy efficiency and international solidarity for adaptation.

Each of the workshops highlighted the best practices of regional governments, analysing the lessons learned from the challenges and opportunities in the respective areas.

Baden-Württemberg also announced its membership of The Climate Group, and has offered to organise a follow-up European Conference of Regions next year.

At the conference, Premier Rann of South Australia also announced Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond as this year’s winner of the “International Climate Change Leadership Award”, honouring his long-term commitment to leading Scotland towards a low-carbon future.

The Scottish government has set itself an ambitious target of reducing emissions by 42% from 1990 levels by 2020 and 80% by 2050, and aims at 100% of its electricity consumption to come from renewable energy sources by 2020.





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