In 2015, during the 21
st session of the UN Climate Change Conference, all countries adopted the Paris Agreement. This is the first legally binding international treaty that has united the countries to fight and adapt to climate change. The goal of the Agreement is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and limit global temperature rise to 2°C during this century.
Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan were the first of the Central Asian countries to ratify the Agreement in 2016. Tajikistan ratified it in 2017, Uzbekistan – in 2018, and Kyrgyzstan – in 2019.
The key aspects of the Paris Agreement include the following tasks:
- to limit the global average temperature increase to well below 2°C, while pursuing efforts to limit the increase to 1.5°C;
- to conserve and increase the forest area for the absorption of greenhouse gases;
- to accelerate the development and international exchange of clean technologies;
- carbon neutrality by 2050: in the second half of the 21st century it is necessary to strike a balance between greenhouse gas emissions and removals;
- every 5 years, the countries should revise the goals and measures to counter climate change
- the developed countries should donate at least $100 billion to developing countries to adapt to climate change by 2020.