Negotiating Bloc
Environmental Integrity Group
Content associated with Environmental Integrity Group
Daily report for 4 December 2018
Katowice Climate Change Conference - December 2018
Daily report for 2 December 2018
Katowice Climate Change Conference - December 2018
Summary report 2–15 December 2018
Katowice Climate Change Conference - December 2018
Highlights and images for 2 December 2018
Katowice Climate Change Conference - December 2018
Highlights for Sunday, 2 December 2018
Ovais Sarmad, UNFCCC Deputy Executive Secretary, UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa, and Frank Bainimarama, COP 23/CMP 13/CMA 1-2 President, sit on the dais as the Katowice Climate Change Conference begins
The Katowice Climate Change Conference opened on Sunday, 2 December, a day earlier than originally scheduled. Parties used this extra day to launch work under all of the bodies meeting at the conference:
The 24th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 24) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC);
The 14th session of the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 14);
The 3rd part of the first session of the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the parties for the Paris Agreement (CMA 1-3);
49th session of the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI 49);
49th session of the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA 49); and
The 7th part of the first session of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement (APA 1-7).
There were several reminders throughout the day of the urgency of the work to complete the details that will operationalize the Paris Agreement, which is due by the close of this meeting. As COP 24 President Michał Kurtyka explained, the work will be “multi-layered,” involving technical discussions and, when needed, discussions elevated to heads of delegations to unlock progress.For more details on the day’s events and to hear what delegates said in the corridors, see our daily Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB).
IISD Reporting Services, through its ENB Meeting Coverage, provided daily reports, daily web coverage, and a summary and analysis from the Katowice Climate Change Conference – December 2018.
Photos by IISD/ENB | Kiara Worth
For photo reprint permissions, please follow instructions at our Attribution Regulations for Meeting Photo Usage Page
Morning Plenary
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa, Frank Bainimarama, COP 23/CMP 13/CMA 1-2 President, and Michał Kurtyka, COP 24/CMP 14/CMA 1-3 President, arrive in plenary
View of the dais during the morning plenary
The COP Presidency is handed over to Michał Kurtyka, COP 24 President
Michał Kurtyka, COP 24 President
Frank Bainimarama, COP 23 President
Delegates during plenary
Amjad Abdulla, Maldives
Andrew Neustaetter, US
Patrick Suckling, Australia
Mohamed Nasr, Gabon, speaking on behalf of the African Group
Opening Plenaries for SBI, SBSTA, and APA
SBI Chair Emmanuel Dlamini, eSwatini, convenes the SBI opening plenary
SBI Chair Emmanuel Dlamini, eSwatini
Thiago de Araujo Mendes, Brazil
SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France, convenes the SBSTA opening plenary
Elena Manaenkova, Deputy Secretary-General, World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
Jane Hupe, International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
Delegates from Saudi Arabia in negotiation with SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France, during the plenary
APA Co-Chair Sarah Baashan, Saudi Arabia, convenes the APA opening plenary
APA Contact Group
APA Co-Chair Jo Tyndall, New Zealand, convenes the APA Contact Group
APA family photo
SBI, SBSTA, and APA Joint Plenary
View of the joint plenary
Vladimir Uskov, COP Vice-President
Wael Aboulmagd, Egypt, speaking on behalf of the G-77/China
Gebru Jember Endalew, Ethiopia, speaking on behalf of the Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
Yoo Yeonchul, Republic of Korea, speaking on behalf of the Environmental Integrity Group (EIG)
Carolina Díaz Acosta, Colombia, speaking on behalf of the Independent Association of Latin America and the Caribbean (AILAC)
Ayman Shasly, Saudi Arabia, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group
Helmut Hojesky, EU
Ravi Prasad, India, speaking on behalf of Brazil, South Africa, India, and China (BASIC)
Majid Shafiepour, Iran, speaking on behalf of the Like-minded Developing Countries (LMDCs)
Ruth Kaviok, Indigenous Peoples
Zhenglin Liu and Maria Auma, Youth NGOs (YOUNGOs)
Informal Consultations throughout the Day
Delegates consult informally throughout the day
Around the Venue
Delegates gather on the first day of COP 24
Helen Plume, New Zealand, speaks with a delegate
Kishan Kumarsingh, Trinidad and Tobago, speaks with SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France
Michał Kurtyka, COP 24 President, UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa, and Alex Saier, UNFCCC Secretariat, during a press conference
Delegates from Monaco
'Sustaina Claus' speaks with a delegate
Michał Kurtyka, COP 24 President
Members of the EIG wear pieces of green to show their commitment to creating a green future
Frank Bainimarama, COP 23/CMP 13/CMA 1-2 President, takes photographs with UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa
UN Security at the start of plenary
SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France; Wanna Tanunchaiwatana, SBSTA Coordinator; SBI Chair Emmanuel Dlamini, eSwatini; Katia Simeonova, SBI Coordinator; APA Co-Chairs Jo Tyndall, New Zealand, and Sarah Baashan, Saudi Arabia; and Sergey Kononov, APA Coordinator
Mehmet Emin Birpınar, Turkey
Delegates speak informally
Helmut Hojesky, Austria, speaks with a delegate
Delegates between sessions
Highlights and images for 9 September 2018
Bangkok Climate Change Conference - September 2018
As the Bangkok Climate Change Conference draws to a close, the draft APA Co-Chairs' text is distributed to delegates
The Bangkok Climate Change Conference closed on Sunday, 9 September, with negotiators concluding this session's work to advance the Paris Agreement Work Programme (PAWP) — the details required to operationalize the 2015 Paris Agreement. The PAWP is scheduled for adoption at the Katowice Climate Change Conference (COP 24) in December 2018. This is widely considered a challenging task. At the beginning of their week in Bangkok, COP 23 President Frank Bainimarama warned countries that “frankly, we are not ready for Katowice.” Following the conclusion of informal consultations in the morning, the contact group of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement (APA) met in the early afternoon. After some debate on how to reflect possible additional matters for the PAWP to address, the group adopted its draft conclusions.Closing plenaries of the APA, the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI), and the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) convened in the afternoon, with each body adopting identical conclusions. Parties made “uneven” progress across the different agenda items. Outcomes under PAWP negotiating items are captured in the annexes to their conclusions as “the Bangkok outcome,” as well as in a 307-page “PAWP compilation.” In their conclusions, the APA, SBI, and SBSTA agree on a way to progress work intersessionally, notably that:
their Presiding Officers should prepare a joint reflections note addressing progress made at this session, and identifying ways forward, “including textual proposals,” to help advance parties’ deliberations towards the PAWP; and
the purpose of this joint note is to address all PAWP matters so as to ensure their “balanced and coordinated” consideration and facilitate successful completion of the PAWP at COP 24.
The note is due by mid-October 2018 in order to inform political discussions scheduled for the “pre-COP” meeting from 24-27 October 2018 in Krakow, Poland. The Conference was gaveled to a close at 7:57 pm following a joint APA-SBI-SBSTA plenary to hear country and observer statements. APA Co-Chair Tyndall declared: “Katowice, here we come!”
IISD Reporting Services, through its Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) Meeting Coverage, provided daily web coverage and daily reports from the Bangkok Climate Change Conference - September 2018. In addition, IISD Reporting Services has publish a summary and analysis report from the Conference.
Photos by IISD/ENB | Kiara Worth
For photo reprint permissions, please follow instructions at our Attribution Regulations for Meeting Photo Usage Page
Informal Consultations throughout the Day
APA informal consultations on adaptation communication guidance
SBI/SBSTA contact group on response measures
SBSTA informal consultations on the technology framework
APA informal consultations on mitigation
Delegates huddle during the SBSTA contact group on modalities for the accounting of financial resources (Agreement Article 9.7)
APA informal consultations on issues related to the Adaptation Fund
APA transparency framework family photo
APA global stocktake family photo
APA Co-Facilitators family photo
APA Contact Group
APA Co-Chair Jo Tyndall, New Zealand
Delegates read the revised APA Co-Chairs' draft text
Delegates discuss the draft text
Delegates from Saudi Arabia
Delegates from India
Andrew Neustaetter, US
Chen Zhihua, China
Franz Perrez, Switzerland
Majid Shafie-Pour, Iran
Joint Closing Plenary of APA, SBI and SBSTA
View of the dais during the joint closing plenary
Wael Aboulmagd, Egypt, speaking on behalf of the G-77/China
Helmut Hojesky, EU
Patrick Suckling, Australia, speaking on behalf of the Umbrella Group
Laura Juliana Arciniegas Rojas, Colombia, speaking on behalf of the Independent Association of Latin America and the Caribbean (AILAC)
Yoo Yeonchul, Republic of Korea, speaking on behalf of the Environmental Integrity Group (EIG)
Amjad Abdulla, Maldives, speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
Gebru Jember Endalew, Ethiopia, speaking on behalf of the Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
Mohamed Nasr, Gabon, speaking on behalf of the African Group
Maesela Kekana, South Africa, speaking on behalf of Brazil, South Africa, India, and China (BASIC)
Reinaldo Salgado, Brazil, speaking on behalf of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay
Nedal Katbeh-Bader, Palestine
Nanna Birk, Women and Gender
Lhavanya Dharmalinga, Environmental NGOs (ENGOs)
Around the Venue
Renilde Ndayishimiye, Burundi
Hugh Sealy, Barbados
Delegates from the Youth NGOs (YOUNGOs)
Seyni Nafo, Mali, and Delphine Eyraud, France, SBSTA Co-Facilitators for modalities for the accounting of financial resources (Agreement Article 9.7)
Nurul Quadir, Bangladesh, and Nora Hamed Alamer, Bahrain
APA Co-Chairs Jo Tyndall, New Zealand, and Sarah Baashan, Saudi Arabia
A delegate reads the Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) to keep track of negotiations
Alex Saier, UNFCCC Secretariat; Ovais Sarmad, UNFCCC Deputy Executive Secretary; and UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa
Rueanna Haynes, Saint Kitts and Nevis
International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) ENB team covering the Bangkok Climate Change Conference: Elaine Limjoco, the Philippines; Natalie Jones, New Zealand; Katie Browne, US; Cleo Verkuijl, Zimbabwe/the Netherlands; Aaron Cosbey, Canada; Jen Allan, Canada; and Kiara Worth, South Africa
Daily report for 6 September 2018
Bangkok Climate Change Conference - September 2018
Highlights and images for 6–26 September 2018
Bangkok Climate Change Conference - September 2018
The Bangkok Climate Change Conference continued for its third day
On Thursday, negotiations on the Paris Agreement Work Programme (PAWP) continued in Bangkok, including on issues related to:
predictability and accounting of finance;
guidance and public registry for NDCs;
market and non-market approaches;
technology;
transparency; and
the global stocktake.
In the afternoon, a stocktaking meeting of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement (APA) took place, as well as a joint stocktake of the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI), Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA), and APA. Negotiations will continue on Friday.For extensive details on the day’s negotiations and to hear what delegates said in the corridors, see our daily Earth Negotiations Bulletin.
IISD Reporting Services, through its Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) Meeting Coverage, provided daily web coverage and daily reports from the Bangkok Climate Change Conference - September 2018. In addition, IISD Reporting Services has publish a summary and analysis report from the Conference.
Photos by IISD/ENB | Kiara Worth
For photo reprint permissions, please follow instructions at our Attribution Regulations for Meeting Photo Usage Page
Informal Consultations throughout the Day
SBI informal consultations on matters related to the predictability of climate finance (Article 9.5 of the Paris Agreement)
APA informal consultations on the transparency framework
SBI informal consultations on the Technology Mechanism
SBSTA contact group on matters relating to market and non-market approaches (Article 6 of the Paris Agreement)
APA informal consultations on the global stocktake
APA Stocktaking Meeting on Items 3-8
View of the dais during the session
Beth Lavender, Canada, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 4 - adaptation communication
Federica Fricano, Italy, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 3 - mitigation section of NDCs
Xiang Gao, China, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 5 - transparency framework
Outi Honkatukia, Finland, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 6 - global stocktake
Pieter Terpstra, the Netherlands, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 8 - further matters, Adaptation Fund
Informal Joint Stocktaking Plenary of SBI, SBSTA, and APA
View of the dais during the joint plenary
Jacob Werksman, EU
Patrick Suckling, Australia, speaking on behalf of the Umbrella Group
Wael Aboulmagd, Egypt, speaking on behalf of the G-77/China
Gebru Jember Endalew, Ethiopia, speaking on behalf of the Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
Laura Juliana Arciniegas Rojas, Colombia, speaking on behalf of the Independent Association of Latin America and the Caribbean (AILAC)
Amjad Abdulla, Maldives, speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
Mohamed Nasr, Gabon, speaking on behalf of the African Group
Franz Perrez, Switzerland, speaking on behalf of the Environmental Integrity Group (EIG)
Executive Secretary Meeting with Observer Organizations
Santhosh Thanjavur Prakasam, UNFCCC Secretariat; Laura Lopez, UNFCCC Secretariat; UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa; and Majda Dabaghi, Business NGOs (BINGOs)
Mark Lukes, Environmental NGOs (ENGOs)
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa
Norine Kennedy, BINGOs
Anish Shrestha, Indigenous Peoples
Bert De Wel, Trade Union NGOs (TUNGOs)
Teresita Vistro, Women and Gender
Observers during the meeting
Around the Venue
Delegates consult informally between sessions
María del Pilar Bueno, Argentina, speaks with a delegate
Delegates from G-77/China meet informally in the corridors
Delegates between sessions
Members of a working group focused on human rights and climate change consult
Summary report 4–9 September 2018
Bangkok Climate Change Conference - September 2018
Highlights and images for 10 May 2018
Bonn Climate Change Conference - April 2018
The Bonn Climate Change Conference ended on Thursday as each of the three bodies adopted conclusions for most of the issues on their agendas and agreed to future work, including at the next meeting in Bangkok, Thailand.
There were mixed views on progress made on the issues related to finalizing the Paris Agreement Work Programme (PAWP), the set of decisions that will help countries implement the Agreement. Some of the items discussed most in the closing statements were:
Transparency framework: There are different views on how the framework should help provide information on countries’ actions and support to developing countries, but many highlighted this issue as one needing further work.
Information on finance, especially provided by developed countries in advance of its provision: Many developing countries noted this issue is important to them in the overall PAWP package.
Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform (LCIP): Many countries and non-party stakeholders said they were disappointed with progress on this issue.
Action on Climate Empowerment (ACE): Parties agreed to a decision, the first issue completed in the PAWP, that will continue parties' and stakeholders' efforts on issues such as public participation, education, and access to information.
The PAWP is slated for conclusion in December 2018. At this meeting, parties agreed to several steps to move the work forward:
The Co-Chairs of all of the bodies will prepare a note that will consider all of the items and propose ways forward.
The Co-Chairs of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement (APA) will prepare a “tool” that will help parties develop an “agreed basis for negotiations.”
There will be an additional meeting in Bangkok devoted to the issues under the PAWP.
Parties adopted several decisions on issues related to the ongoing implementation of the UN Climate Change Convention and the Kyoto Protocol, including the Koronivia joint work programme on agriculture, which includes a roadmap outlining the issues, workshops, and inputs of the work programme.
IISD Reporting Services, through its Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) Meeting Coverage, provided daily digital coverage, daily reports, daily videos, and a summary and analysis report from the Bonn Climate Change Conference - April/May 2018. The summary and analysis report is now available in HTML and PDF.
Photos by IISD/ENB | Kiara Worth
For photo reprint permissions, please follow instructions at our Attribution Regulations for Meeting Photo Usage Page
SBI Closing Plenary
View of the dais during the SBI closing plenary
SBI Chair Emmanuel Dlamini, Swaziland
Vladimir Uskov, Russian Federation
Wang Tian, China
Ravi Prasad, India
Reinaldo Salgado, Brazil
Ziaul Haque, Bangladesh
Abdullah Tawlah, Saudi Arabia
Delegates from Switzerland
SBSTA Closing Plenary
View of the dais during the SBSTA closing plenary
SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France
Henrik Eriksen, Norway
Walter Schuldt Espinel, Ecuador
Franz Perrez, Switzerland, speaking on behalf of the Environmental Integrity Group (EIG)
MJ Mace, Saint Lucia, speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
Iwaki Kohei, Japan
Catherine Stewart, Canada
Julio Cordano, Chile
APA Closing Plenary
View of the dais during the APA closing plenary
Ovais Sarmad, UNFCCC Deputy Executive Secretary
APA Co-Chairs Sarah Baashan, Saudi Arabia, and Jo Tyndall, New Zealand
Joint Closing Plenary
View of the dais during the closing plenary
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa thanks Halldór Thorgeirsson, Senior Director for
Intergovernmental Affairs, UNFCCC, for almost two decades of service
Halldór Thorgeirsson, Senior Director for Intergovernmental Affairs, UNFCCC
Wael Aboulmagd, Egypt, speaking on behalf of the G-77/China
Boriana Kamenova, EU
Majid Shafie-Pour, Iran, speaking on behalf of the Like-minded Developing Countries (LMDCs)
Mohamed Nasr, Gabon, speaking on behalf of the African Group
María del Carmen Herrera Caseiro, Cuba, speaking on behalf of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA)
Patrick Suckling, Australia, speaking on behalf of the Umbrella Group
Harlino Nandha Prayudha, Youth NGOs (YOUNGOs)
Patricia Bohland, Women and Gender
Nathalie Rengifo, Climate Justice Now! (CJN!)
Around the Venue
Delegates from Austria
The SBI family
The SBSTA family
Delegates from Kuwait
Delegates from Morocco
Delegates from Kenya
Delegates from Kyrgyzstan
UN Security family photo
Ovais Sarmad, UNFCCC Deputy Executive Secretary (center), speaks with members of the UNFCCC Secretariat
Delegates from Maldives
The International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) team meeting with UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa and Incoming COP 24 President Michal Kurtyka, Poland
Delegates between sessions
Media briefings took place throughout the day
The ENB team covering the negotiations (L-R): Rishikesh Ram Bhandary, Nepal; Katie Browne, US; Natalie Jones, New Zealand; Cleo Verkuijl, Zimbabwe/ the Netherlands; Jennifer Allan, Canada; Aaron Cosbey, Canada; Kati Kulovesi, Finland; Annelies van Gaalen, South Africa; Asheline Appleton, Kenya; Felipe Ruiz, Colombia/Spain; and Kiara Worth, South Africa
Highlights and images for 9 May 2018
Bonn Climate Change Conference - April 2018
At the Bonn Climate Change Conference, delegates worked to realize agreements on the second to last day. Negotiators concluded their consideration of several issues, while consideration of other issues, such as research and systemic observation and matters related to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement (cooperative approaches), continues.
To bring together the work related to several issues under the Paris Agreement Work Programme (PAWP), the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement (APA) convened a contact group. During this meeting, the APA Co-Chairs proposed a way forward, which parties deliberated, revised, and eventually agreed to.
The Technical Expert Meeting on Adaptation (TEM-A) met throughout the day to discuss adaptation planning for vulnerable groups, communities, and ecosystems. The sixth Dialogue on Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE) continued, focusing on public participation, public access to information, and international cooperation.
The meeting is scheduled to close on Thursday, with conclusions expected on many issues.
For extensive details on the day’s negotiations and to hear what delegates said in the corridors, see our daily Earth Negotiations Bulletin.
IISD Reporting Services, through its Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) Meeting Coverage, provided daily digital coverage, daily reports, daily videos, and a summary and analysis report from the Bonn Climate Change Conference - April/May 2018. The summary and analysis report is now available in HTML and PDF.
Photos by IISD/ENB | Kiara Worth
For photo reprint permissions, please follow instructions at our Attribution Regulations for Meeting Photo Usage Page
Technical Expert Meeting on Adaptation 2018
Participants gather for the TEM-A
SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France
Musonda Mumba, UN Environment Programme (UNEP)
Clifford Mahlung, Jamaica
Barney Dickson, UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC)
Valerie Kapos, UNEP-WCMC
Nicola Tollin, University of Southern Denmark
Diann Black-Layne, Antigua and Barbuda
Angela Andrade, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
In-Session Workshop on Gender and Climate Change
Participants during the in-session workshop on gender and climate change
Mary Robinson, Mary Robinson Foundation - Climate Justice
Fleur Newman, UNFCCC Secretariat
Colin Hehir, Co-Facilitator
Stella Gama, Malawi
Verona Collantes-Lebale, UN Women
Participants brainstorm during break-out groups
Closing of the Talanoa Dialogue
View of the dais during the closing of the Talanoa Dialogue
Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, and COP 23 President, Fiji
Incoming COP 24 President Michal Kurtyka, Poland
Heike Summer, Liechtenstein, speaking on behalf of the Environmental Integrity Group (EIG)
Balisi Justice Gopolang, Botswana, speaking on behalf of the African Group
Maesela Kekana, South Africa, speaking on behalf of Brazil, South Africa, India and China (BASIC)
Alberto Saldamando, Indigenous Peoples Organizations (IPO)
Abdullahi Majeed, Maldives, speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
Justin Perrettson, Business and Industry NGOs (BINGOs)
APA Contact Group
View of the dais during the APA contact group
Sin Liang Cheah, Singapore, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 3 - mitigation
APA Co-Chairs Jo Tyndall, New Zealand, and Sarah Baashan, Saudi Arabia
Beth Lavender, Canada, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 4 - adaptation communication
Xiang Gao, China, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 5 - transparency framework
Janine Coye-Felson, Belize, Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 7 - committee to facilitate implementation and promote compliance
APA Co-Chair Jo Tyndall, New Zealand, and Co-Facilitator for agenda item 8 - other matters
Pieter Terpstra, the Netherlands, and Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 8 - further matters, Adaptation Fund
Outi Honkatukia, Finland, and Co-Facilitator for APA agenda item 6 - global stocktake
Informal Consultations Throughout the Day
Family photo of APA agenda 8 - Adaptation Fund
Family photo of APA agenda item 5, transparency framework
Delegates huddle during informal consultations
SBSTA contact group on matters relating to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement
Civil Society Demonstrations
Members of civil society hold a demonstration to stress the importance of human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, association, speech, and privacy in the context of digital technologies and multilateral processes. They highlighted the role and importance of civil society in the fight against climate change.
Civil society members recognize the 21 countries with gender focal points
Members of civil society and other non-party stakeholders call for urgent action to prevent average global warming from rising 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels
Members of civil society illustrate two pressing forces on negotiators: extreme weather events and fossil fuel lobbyists. The demonstrators called for more attention to be paid to civil society and for negotiators to accelerate climate action 'before it is too late.'
Members of civil society raise awareness about the health impacts of climate change, calling for urgent climate action
Around the Venue
Delegates gather at the start of the day
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa, confers with Ovais Sarmad, UNFCCC Deputy Executive Secretary
Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, and COP 23 President, Fiji, with members of the COP 23 Presiency
Delegates from the US and Saudi Arabia
Marcela Main Sancha, Secretary to the COP and Andrei Marcu, Panama
Representatives of BINGOs meet with UNFCCC Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa and members of the UNFCCC Secretariat
Carlos Fuller, Belize, speaks with delegates
Kimo Goree, International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) Vice-President, speaks with Benito Müller, Oxford Climate Policy
UN Security around the venue
Representatives of the International Network for Sustainable Energy (INFORSE)