Eighteen
nations including the U.S., Japan and Germany will work together to develop
international carbon markets to help speed the pace of emission reductions
under the Paris climate deal struck Saturday, according to the New Zealand
government.
Saturday’s deal by envoys from more than 190
countries gathered in Paris allows cooperation between nations to meet
emission-limitation pledges. It also creates a new market to promote
sustainable development, speeding carbon cuts by state entities and private
companies. China plans to create the world’s biggest carbon market by 2017,
about double the size of 10-year old European program, currently the largest.
China and India aren’t part of the 18-nation group.
The standards will encourage other countries
to support markets to “complement the Paris Agreement and with the ultimate aim
of strengthening action under the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change,” the 18 countries said. “Through this declaration we want to
send a clear signal to the global carbon market and provide certainty that
there is an important role for markets in the post-2020 period.”
The countries are Australia, Canada, Chile,
Colombia, Germany, Iceland, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New
Zealand, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Republic of Korea, Senegal, Ukraine, and the
U.S.
Πηγή: bloomberg.com
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