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Daily report for 11 July 2019
2019 High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF 2019)
Highlights and images for 10 July 2019
2019 High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF 2019)
Highlights for Wednesday, 10 July 2019
"If women stop, the world stops." As discussions focused on SDG 8, decent work and economic growth, representatives from the Women's Major Group dress in red to remind delegates about the important role women play in the global workforce.
Posted by IISD Reporting Services on Wednesday, 10 July 2019
HLPF 2019 continued on Wednesday at UN Headquarters in New York. A thematic review on empowering people and ensuring inclusiveness and equality in the morning included two sessions, on the perspectives of small island developing states (SIDS), and of least developed countries (LDCs) and landlocked developing countries (LLDCs). Speakers highlighted innovations, such as a peer review system for voluntary national reviews (VNRs); and challenges, such as high vulnerability and capacity needs, in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They emphasized mutually reinforcing synergies between achieving the SDGs and the SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action (SAMOA) Pathway; the Vienna Programme of Action (VPoA) for LLDCs; and the Istanbul Programme of Action for LDCs.In the afternoon, a review of implementation and interrelations among SDGs focused on SDG 8 (decent work and economic growth). Progress on achieving this Goal was reported as being slow, and somewhat mixed: despite an increase in gross domestic product growth globally, the LDCs are falling short of their 7% target; 22% of the young people around the world are not in education, employment, or training; and the increase in labor productivity shows a high variation across regions.Several speakers discussed the impacts of the digital economy, describing it as a "double edged sword" that empowers people but can also have disruptive implications for the future of work. The need to reform educational curricula to ensure that skills match future needs was emphasized, as was the critical need to increase women’s participation in the labor market in general, and in the digital economy in particular.For more details on the day's events and to hear what delegates said in the corridors, see our daily Earth Negotiations Bulletin.
IISD Reporting Services, through its ENB Meeting Coverage, provided daily web coverage and daily reports from HLPF 2019. In addition, IISD Reporting Services has published a summary and analysis report from the meeting, which 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.
Thematic Review: Perspectives of Small Island Developing States
Panel speakers discuss the main findings from the mid-term review of the SAMOA Pathway (L-R): Yvonne Hyde, CEO, Ministry of Economic Development and Petroleum, Belize; Douglas Slater, Assistant Secretary-General for Human and Social Development, Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat; Pat Breen, Minister of State for Trade, Employment, Business, EU Digital Single Market, and Data Protection, Ireland; Mona Juul, Vice-President, ECOSOC; Lesley Brough, ECOSOC Affairs Branch; Moderator Emele Duituturaga, former Executive Director, Pacific Islands Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (PIANGO); Rakesh Bhuckory, Minister Counsellor, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration, and International Trade, Mauritius; and Maria-Francesca Spatolisano, Assistant Secretary-General, Policy Coordination and Inter-Agency Affairs, UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA).
Pat Breen, Minister of State for Trade, Employment, Business, EU Digital Single Market, and Data Protection, Ireland
Rakesh Bhuckory, Minister Counsellor, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration, and International Trade, Mauritius
Fiame Naomi Mata'afa, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Natural Resources and the Environment, Samoa
Stacy Richards-Kennedy, The University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago
Yvonne Hyde, CEO, Ministry of Economic Development and Petroleum, Belize
Lois Young, Belize, speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
Willy Missack, Pacific Climate Change Collaboration, Influencing, and Learning (PACCCIL)
Thematic Review: Perspectives of Least Developed Countries and Landlocked Developing Countries
Panel speakers discuss the implementation of the Istanbul Programme of Action for LDCs (L-R): Fekitamoeloa Katoa ‘Utoikamanu, UN High Representative for LDCs, LLDCs and SIDS; Saad Alfarargi, UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Development; Jerry Tardieu, Congressman, Haiti; Mona Juul, Vice-President, ECOSOC; Ziad Mahmassani, Department for General Assembly and Conference Management (DGACM); Moderator Hope Muli, Hivos, Kenya; Ricardo Fuentes-Nieva, Executive Director, Oxfam Mexico.
Saad Alfarargi, UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Development
Richard Ssewakiryanga, Co-Chair, Civil Society Organization (CSO) Partnership for Development Effectiveness
Doma Tshering, Permanent Representative of Bhutan to the UN, and Co-Facilitator of the Political Declaration of the Midterm Review of the Implementation of the Vienna Programme of Action (VPoA) for LLDCs
Moderator Hope Muli, Hivos, Kenya
Jerry Tardieu, Congressman, Haiti
Perks Ligoya, Malawi
Khomraj Koirala, Nepal
Chika Mercedes Ibeh, Women's Major Group; Vladislav Kaim, Major Group for Children and Youth; and Enma Catu Raxjal, Indigenous Peoples
Discussion on SDG 8 – Decent Work and Economic Growth
Panel speakers during the session (L-R): Peter Robinson, President, US Council for International Business
(USCIB); Darja Isaksson, Director-General, Vinnova, Sweden; Mamadou Diallo, Deputy Secretary-General, International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC); Valentin Rybakov, Vice-President, ECOSOC; Emer Herity, UN DESA; Moderator Moussa Oumarou, Deputy Director-General for Field Operations and Partnerships, International Labour Organization (ILO); and Fu Xiaolan, Professor and Founding Director, Technology and Management Centre for
Development, Oxford University.
Faryal Ahmed, Statistics Division, DESA
Fu Xiaolan, Oxford University
Using the interactive platform Sli.do, delegates highlight what they consider to be the most important challenges and opportunities facing employment in the years leading up to 2030.
Mamadou Diallo, Deputy Secretary-General, ITUC
Darja Isaksson, Director General, Vinnova, Sweden
Lead Discussants Olga Algayerova, Executive Secretary, UN Economic Commission for Europe (ECE); and Matthias Thorns, Deputy Secretary-General, International Organization of Employers (IOE)
Anne-Beth Skrede, Norway
Rodrigo Carazo, Costa Rica
Around the Venue
Delegates share a moment at the start of a session.
Delegates from Morocco
Delegates from Italy
Delegates from the Dominican Republic
Delegates from Kuwait
Delegates speak informally between sessions.
Visitors to the UN watch the proceedings of HLPF from the observation window.
Celebrating the 100-year anniversary of the ILO, an exhibition around UN Headquarters highlights the importance of ensuring social justice and decent work.
In the SDG Media Hub, Red, the Angriest Bird, commits himself to climate action, to the delight of visitors to the UN.
Summary report 9–19 July 2019
2019 High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF 2019)
Report of main proceedings for 9 July 2019
2019 High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF 2019)
Highlights and images for 5 July 2019
Facilitator Natasha Walker
On Friday, participants to the Trondheim Conference on Biodiversity heard presentations on communication, outreach, and the role of stakeholders with regard to the post-2020 global biodiversity framework, as well as on key cross-cutting issues, including capacity building, resource mobilization, and research needs. They addressed the draft Co-Chairs' report, which will be finalized in the coming weeks on the basis of participants' input; heard comments on next steps from Conference Co-Chairs' Nina Vik and Finn Katerås, and the Co-Chairs of the Open-ended Working Group of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) on the post-2020 framework Francis Ogwal and Basile van Havre; and heard a closing statement from Ellen Hambro, Norwegian Environment Agency.
Jane Smart, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), stressed the need for increased clarity of the post-2020 framework and its targets, and for alignment with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, Minister of Environment and Energy, Costa Rica, emphasized the need for: phasing out perverse incentives; open and transparent objectives regarding resource mobilization; and aligning public and private investments with national biodiversity strategies and action plans.
Sudhanshu Sarronwala, WWF International, highlighted a WWF study examining consumer mindsets in ten developing countries, where half the people believe that biodiversity is declining, but only 40% see biodiversity and nature as an important source of raw materials for the economy; and only one third associate biodiversity with basic necessities such as food and fresh water. Highlighting how targets are influencing business, Alice Durand-Reville, Danone, explained that Danone has committed to carbon neutrality by 2050 throughout the whole value chain, which entailed rethinking products and energy consumption.
Joji Cariño, Forest Peoples Programme, presented on the contributions of indigenous peoples and local communities to CBD implementation, and lessons shared through the Local Biodiversity Outlooks. Christian Schwarzer, Germany, and Melina Sakiyama, Brazil, Global Youth Biodiversity Network, urged addressing overproduction and consumption, global inequalities, and assassinations of nature defenders. Jamison Ervin, UN Development Programme, highlighted the need for developing capacities to: replicate; scale-up; transform supply chains; tell a good story; unleash private sector capital; create a planetary safety net; and buffer the most vulnerable.
Mark Zimsky, Global Environment Facility (GEF), noted that the GEF's seventh replenishment has been reoriented to address the systemic and underlying drivers of biodiversity loss, adding that a two-track investment strategy is focusing on: cities; sustainable forest management; and food systems, land use, and restoration. Meriem Bouamrane, Man and the Biosphere Programme, UNESCO, highlighted: the contribution of culture and of diverse knowledge and value systems; the role of education and life-learning processes; the need for countries to have endogenous research and monitoring capacities; interdependency between biodiversity and development issues; and the need to address urban issues.
Francis Ogwal and Basile van Havre, Co-Chairs of the CBD Open-ended Working Group on the post-2020 framework, identified new elements to be addressed, including the need to involve new sectors, and consider new factors such as population change, food and agriculture, human health, deforestation, and restoration.
Conference Co-Chairs Nina Vik and Finn Katerås announced that all conference outputs, including the Co-Chairs' report and powerpoint presentations, will be available on the conference webpage. They expressed the hope that the Conference provided knowledge, friendships, inspiration, and motivation to participants, and invited them to provide their feedback in the upcoming month.
Ellen Hambro stressed the scientific basis has never been bolder, and the biodiversity crisis never higher on the global agenda. She expressed her appreciation to all participants for their enthusiasm and dedication, and closed the Conference at 1:00 pm.
Highlights and images for 5 July 2019
9th Trondheim Conference on Biodiversity
Highlights for Friday, 5 July 2019
Facilitator Natasha Walker
On Friday, participants to the Trondheim Conference on Biodiversity heard presentations on communication, outreach, and the role of stakeholders with regard to the post-2020 global biodiversity framework, as well as on key cross-cutting issues, including capacity building, resource mobilization, and research needs. They addressed the draft Co-Chairs' report, which will be finalized in the coming weeks on the basis of participants' input; heard comments on next steps from Conference Co-Chairs' Nina Vik and Finn Katerås, and the Co-Chairs of the Open-ended Working Group of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) on the post-2020 framework Francis Ogwal and Basile van Havre; and heard a closing statement from Ellen Hambro, Norwegian Environment Agency. Jane Smart, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), stressed the need for increased clarity of the post-2020 framework and its targets, and for alignment with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, Minister of Environment and Energy, Costa Rica, emphasized the need for: phasing out perverse incentives; open and transparent objectives regarding resource mobilization; and aligning public and private investments with national biodiversity strategies and action plans.Sudhanshu Sarronwala, WWF International, highlighted a WWF study examining consumer mindsets in ten developing countries, where half the people believe that biodiversity is declining, but only 40% see biodiversity and nature as an important source of raw materials for the economy; and only one third associate biodiversity with basic necessities such as food and fresh water. Highlighting how targets are influencing business, Alice Durand-Reville, Danone, explained that Danone has committed to carbon neutrality by 2050 throughout the whole value chain, which entailed rethinking products and energy consumption.Joji Cariño, Forest Peoples Programme, presented on the contributions of indigenous peoples and local communities to CBD implementation, and lessons shared through the Local Biodiversity Outlooks. Christian Schwarzer, Germany, and Melina Sakiyama, Brazil, Global Youth Biodiversity Network, urged addressing overproduction and consumption, global inequalities, and assassinations of nature defenders. Jamison Ervin, UN Development Programme, highlighted the need for developing capacities to: replicate; scale-up; transform supply chains; tell a good story; unleash private sector capital; create a planetary safety net; and buffer the most vulnerable. Mark Zimsky, Global Environment Facility (GEF), noted that the GEF's seventh replenishment has been reoriented to address the systemic and underlying drivers of biodiversity loss, adding that a two-track investment strategy is focusing on: cities; sustainable forest management; and food systems, land use, and restoration. Meriem Bouamrane, Man and the Biosphere Programme, UNESCO, highlighted: the contribution of culture and of diverse knowledge and value systems; the role of education and life-learning processes; the need for countries to have endogenous research and monitoring capacities; interdependency between biodiversity and development issues; and the need to address urban issues. Francis Ogwal and Basile van Havre, Co-Chairs of the CBD Open-ended Working Group on the post-2020 framework, identified new elements to be addressed, including the need to involve new sectors, and consider new factors such as population change, food and agriculture, human health, deforestation, and restoration. Conference Co-Chairs Nina Vik and Finn Katerås announced that all conference outputs, including the Co-Chairs' report and powerpoint presentations, will be available on the conference webpage. They expressed the hope that the Conference provided knowledge, friendships, inspiration, and motivation to participants, and invited them to provide their feedback in the upcoming month. Ellen Hambro stressed the scientific basis has never been bolder, and the biodiversity crisis never higher on the global agenda. She expressed her appreciation to all participants for their enthusiasm and dedication, and closed the Conference at 1:00 pm.
IISD Reporting Services, through its ENB+ Meeting Coverage, provided daily web coverage and a summary report from the 9th Trondheim Conference on Biodiversity. The summary report is now available in HTML and PDF.
Photos by IISD/ENB | Mike Muzurakis
For photo reprint permissions, please follow instructions at our Attribution Regulations for Meeting Photo Usage Page.
Meriem Bouamrane, UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
Mark Zimsky, Global Environment Facility (GEF)
Christian Schwarzer, Germany, Global Youth Biodiversity Network (GYBN)
Jerry Harrison, UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre
Jake Rice, Canada
Anne Martinussen, Norwegian Environment Agency
Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, Minister of Environment and Energy, Costa Rica
Participants during a coffee break
Conference Co-Chairs Nina Vik, and Finn Katerås, Norwegian Environment Agency
Alice Durand-Reville, Danone
Sudhanshu (Suds) Sarronwala, WWF International
Ellen Hambro, Norwegian Environment Agency
Jane Smart, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
Joji Cariño, Forest Peoples Programme
From L-R: Melina Sakiyama, Brazil, GYBN; Christian Schwarzer, Germany, GYBN; Alice Durand-Reville, Danone; Joji Cariño, Forest Peoples Programme; Sudhanshu (Suds) Sarronwala, WWF International; Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, Minister of Environment and Energy, Costa Rica; and Jane Smart, IUCN
Jamison Ervin, UN Development Programme (UNDP)
Melina Sakiyama, Brazil, GYBN
Marianne Gjørv, Norwegian Environment Agency, and Sudhanshu (Suds) Sarronwala, WWF International
Summary report 1–5 July 2019
9th Trondheim Conference on Biodiversity
Highlights and images for 27 June 2019
Bonn Climate Change Conference - June 2019
Highlights for Thursday, 27 June 2019
On the last day of the Bonn Climate Change Conference, many countries, including those most vulnerable to climate change, remind delegates that 'science is not negotiable.'
The last day of the Bonn Climate Change Conference started slow, to allow parties to work through difficult issues, and ended smoothly, as parties adopted the outcomes of the meetings.In a much-awaited decision on the Special Report on 1.5°C of Global Warming (SR1.5), the SBSTA “expressed its appreciation and gratitude to the IPCC and the scientific community for responding to the invitation of the Conference of the Parties (COP) and providing the SR1.5, which reflects the best available science.” The decision reflected a razor-thin compromise between the many parties who wanted to celebrate the scientific achievements of the report and the few who expressed concerns with the report.Groups of developing countries that are vulnerable to climate change defended the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) SR1.5, saying “listening to science not a choice, but a duty.” Wearing t-shirts that exemplify their message, the Environmental Integrity Group, declared “Science is not negotiable.”Parties agreed to several outcomes, including:
Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture: New Zealand will host an intersessional workshop on sustainable land and water management, and strategies and modalities to scale up practices and technologies to increase resilience and sustainable production;
The terms of reference for the review of the Warsaw International Mechanism on Loss and Damage associated with climate change impacts was adopted. This sets out the scope of the review of the WIM to take place at the Santiago Climate Change Conference in December 2019.
Nairobi Work Programme: The Programme will prioritize thematic areas in its work on adaptation and vulnerability to climate change, namely: extreme weather events, drought, forests and grasslands, oceans, and agriculture and food security.
Article 6 (markets and non-market approaches): Countries brought together their work from Katowice to forge a path forward. They agreed to proceed on the basis of texts put together by the Co-Facilitators. As decision looms in Santiago, countries will arrive with an agreed basis for negotiations.
The meeting was gavelled to a close at 10:07 pm.The next meeting of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is in December in Santiago, Chile.
IISD Reporting Services, through its ENB Meeting Coverage, provided daily web coverage, daily reports, and a summary and analysis report from the Bonn Climate Change Conference - June 2019, which 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
Consultations throughout the Day
The room is filled to capacity during the SBSTA Chair's consultations with Heads of Delegations.
SBI informal consultations on administrative, financial and institutional matters: Programme budget for the biennium 2020–2021.
Co-Facilitators and the Secretariat of the SBI/SBSTA informal consultations on the terms of reference for the 2019 review of the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage associated with Climate Change Impacts (WIM) share a moment as the session concludes.
Family photo of the SBSTA contact group on matters relating to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement.
Delegates huddle informally in the corridors.
SBI Closing Plenary
SBI Chair Emmanuel Dlamini, eSwatini, closes the SBI plenary.
Abdullah Tawlah, Saudi Arabia
Ammar Hijazi, Palestine, speaking on behalf of the G-77/China
SBSTA Closing Plenary
After a week-long heatwave across Europe, SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France, closes the SBSTA plenary with the same image that he showed at the opening plenary: the Keeling Curve, a graph of the accumulation of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere.
Ana Villalobos, Costa Rica, speaking on behalf of the Independent Association of Latin America and the Caribbean (AILAC)
Lois Young, Belize, speaking on behalf of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS)
Franz Perrez, Switzerland, speaking on behalf of the Environmental Integrity Group (EIG)
Ian Fry, Tuvalu, speaking on behalf of the Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
Ovais Sarmad, UNFCCC Deputy Executive Secretary
Stella Gama, SBSTA Rapporteur
SBSTA family photo.
Joint Closing Plenary
View of the dais during the closing plenary.
Ion Cîmpeanu, EU
Kunzang, Bhutan, speaking on behalf of the LDCs
Majid Shafiepour, Iran, speaking on behalf of the Like-minded Developing Countries (LMDCs)
Martine Badibanga Kamunga, Democratic Republic of the Congo, speaking on behalf of the Coalition for Rainforest Nations (CfRN)
Sandra Leticia Guzman Luna, Mexico, speaking on behalf of the EIG
Mohamed Nasr, Egypt, speaking on behalf of the African Group
Gareth Williams, Australia, speaking on behalf of the Umbrella Group
Felipe Andres Gutierrez, Climate Justice Now!, and Paula Tassara, Climate Action Network (CAN), speaking on behalf of the Environmental NGOs (ENGOs)
Jisun Hwang, Local Government and Municipal Authorities (LGMA), and Juan Carlos Jintiach, Indigenous Peoples Organizations
Dolphine Atieno Magero and Tomasz Ferenz, Youth NGOs (YOUNGOs)
Around the Venue
Delegates meet informally in the corridors as they wait for the closing plenary to begin.
Delegates read the draft conclusions.
Ayman Shasly, Saudi Arabia, speaks with his delegation.
Representatives of the EIG wear shirts saying "science is not negotiable."
Representatives from AOSIS working on loss and damage, and adaptation.
YOUNGOs family photo.
SBI Family Photo: Katia Simeonova, SBI Coordinator; SBI Chair Emmanuel Dlamini, Laurence Pollier, UNFCCC Secretariat; and Vanessa Matarazzi, UNFCCC Secretariat
Ana Villalobos, Costa Rica, and SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France
Katia Simeonova, SBI Coordinator
Federica Fricano, Italy, speaks with a delegate.
Ulrik Lenaerts, Belgium
Vladimir Uskov, Russian Federation
Delegates between sessions
The International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) team covering the Bonn Climate Change Conference: Rishikesh Ram Bhandary, Nepal; Nancy Williams, US; Jen Allan, Canada/UK; Bernard Soubry, Canada; Beate Antonich, Germany; and Kiara Worth, South Africa
Highlights and images for 26 June 2019
Bonn Climate Change Conference - June 2019
Highlights for Wednesday, 26 June 2019
In a civil society demonstration focused on loss and damage, youth representatives warn about the dangerous impacts of climate change and call for urgent action to be taken to protect future generations.
On the penultimate day of the Bonn Climate Change Conference, much remained unresolved. Huddles and high-level engagement became the modus operandis of the day.Parties continued to discuss issues, from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on 1.5°C to the budget, with limited progress. Discussions on the reporting formats that will operationalize the enhanced transparency framework under the Paris Agreement moved along in closed-door sessions. The Chair of the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) held a two-hour meeting with the heads of delegations to try to work out remaining issues before the closing plenaries tomorrow. Similarly, the budget inched toward agreement as time started to run out.While delegates worked on brackets and re-worked text on the screen, other participants engaged in action-oriented exchanges to share lessons and catalyze new actions. A special event titled “Driving Change Together-Special Joint Event on Multilevel Action” focused on e-mobility and adaptation. The Thematic Expert Meeting on Adaptation wrapped up today, with participants continuing to grapple with the question of how to engage the private sector in building resilience to the effects of climate change while safeguarding local communities.A third special event, new for the UNFCCC and convened by the Paris Committee for Capacity-building and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OCHCR), focused on the implications of climate change for the full enjoyment of human rights.Looking ahead to the Santiago Climate Change Conference, several participants worried that the COP may become bogged down in the technical details of the issues discussed here, many of which reflect deep political divides. But some delegates noted that political guidance could help negotiators, and help build momentum on climate action before the Paris Agreement’s start date in 2020.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 web coverage, daily reports, and a summary and analysis report from the Bonn Climate Change Conference - June 2019, which 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
Consultations throughout the Day
Delegates gather for the SBSTA informal consultations on matters relating to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement.
Delegates huddle during the SBSTA informal consultations on research and systemic observation.
SBI/SBSTA informal consultations on matters relating to the forum on the impact of the implementation of response measures serving the Convention, the Kyoto Protocol, and the Paris Agreement.
SBI informal consultations on arrangements for intergovernmental meetings.
Delegates stand against the walls and sit on the floor during the SBSTA informal consultations on the IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C.
SBSTA Chair Paul Watkinson, France (far right), consults with the Co-Facilitators and Secretariat during the SBI/SBSTA informal consultations on terms of reference for the 2019 review of the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage associated with Climate Change Impacts (WIM)
Members of the G-77/China huddle outside of the informal consultations on methodological issues under the Paris Agreement.
Technical Expert Meeting on Adaptation
At the start of the Technical Expert Meeting on Adaptation (TEM-A), delegates begin with playing a version of the game 'rock-paper-scissors' as a way to highlight the difficulties of achieving a coordinated approach between different stakeholders. Throughout the day, four sessions were held: adaptation planning and financing at different scales; financing commercialization of adaptation technology solutions; financial instruments to mobilize private sector engagement in climate resilience; and outlook to the remaining 2019 technical examination process on adaptation.
Jaime Webbe, Climate Technology Centre and Network (CTCN)
Moderator Donna Mitzi Lagdameo, Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre
Shiv Seewoobaduth, Mauritius
Rebecca Nadin, Overseas Development Institute (ODI)
Gebru Endalew, Ethiopia
Crispus Mugambi, CARE International
Special Joint Event - Driving Change Together
High-level speakers for the special joint event Driving Change Together - Multilevel Action Focusing on E-Mobility and Adaptation.
Ashok-Alexander Sridharan, Mayor of Bonn
Ion Cîmpeanu, Romania
Martin Frick, Senior Director for Policy and Programme Coordination, UNFCCC Secretariat, moderated the session.
Maciej Mazur, Polish Alternative Fuels Association
Sandra Leticia Guzman Luna, Mexico
Local municipal authorities and the high-level speakers take a family photo before breaking out into two discussion groups focused on adaptation and e-mobility.
COP 25 Presidency Meeting with Observers
Carolina Schmidt, Minister of the Environment, Chile, and COP 25 President-designate
Henrique Fernandes, Youth NGOs (YOUNGOs)
Felipe Andres Gutierrez, Climate Justice Now!
Bridget Burns, Women and Gender
Sandra Maria Hanni, Business and Industry NGOs (BINGOs)
Building Capacity for Integrating Human Rights into Climate Action
Panel speakers during the event
Iván José Véjar Pardo, COP 25 Presidency
Sébastian Ducyk, Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL)
Benjamin Schachter, OHCHR, and Jennifer Hanna, Paris Committee on Capacity-building (PCCB)
Estebancio Castro Diaz, Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform Facilitative Working Group (LCIPP FWG)
Notes are taken during three break out groups focused on: how the integration of human rights and related themes contribute to more effective climate policies and to higher ambition in terms of mitigation and adaptation; identifying the key capacity-building needs and gaps of different stakeholders; and what key capacity-building solutions and good practices exist that can be replicated.
Civil Society Demonstrations
As the WIM negotiations struggle to reach textutal agreement, members of YOUNGO demonstrate in the corridors, highlighting the severe health impacts that will be felt with an increase of temperature and call for developed countries to listen to the needs of developing countries, and to open up new streams of finance to address climate change.
Delegates 'die' due to the severe health impacts that will be experienced at extreme temperatures.
UN interns demonstrate outside the building calling for better labor rights and pay.
Around the Venue
A delegate watches the live schedule to keep track of the day's events.
Budget Co-Facilitators Talieh Wögerbauer, Austria, and Kishan Kumarsingh, Trinidad and Tobago
Carolina Schmidt, Minister of the Environment, Chile, and COP 25 President-designate, arrives at the venue.
A delegate reads the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) Earth Negotiations Bulletin (ENB) to keep track of the negotiations.
Delegates read the draft conclusions during the IPCC consultations.
Delegates from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia consult informally.
Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, Indigenous Peoples
Conference staff around the venue.
Highlights and images for 24 June 2019
Bonn Climate Change Conference - June 2019
Highlights for Monday, 24 June 2019
Delegates review a document in the corridors as the second week of the Bonn Climate Change Conference begins.
The Bonn Climate Change Conference began its second week of work, with delegates turning their attention to the outcomes of this session that would inform work at the next meeting in Santiago, Chile in December. On several issues, Co-Facilitators presented draft conclusions that would summarize the state of discussions on a given issue and, in some cases, set out intersessional work.On other issues, such as agriculture, and methodological issues under the Paris Agreement, parties provided their views on what those conclusions should be. Agriculture delegates continued working in the afternoon in “informal informal informal” meetings to try to bridge the gap between views on how to take forward the work of the Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture.Looking further ahead, the 7th Action on Climate Empowerment (ACE) Dialogue delegates focused on how to enhance education, training, and public awareness and participation under the Paris Agreement. The participants rallied in breakout groups to discuss how past lessons and future priorities for policy, tools and support, non-party stakeholders, tracking progress and reporting, and international cooperation. Many left buoyed by the idea that, for people to act, they need to identify themselves in stories and to tell their stories.The Long-term Finance Workshop also thought in transformational terms, drawing connections between climate finance, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), and the Addis Ababa Action Agenda on financing for development. Grappling with the complex calculations of needs and costs of achieving sustainable development and limiting global temperature rise to well below 2°C, many recognized that actions consistent with an energy transformation could either increase or reduce the costs of achieving the SDGs.In the multilateral assessment, Australia, Croatia and Malta, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, and Liechtenstein and Monaco presented information on their emissions, and national efforts.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 web coverage, daily reports, and a summary and analysis report from the Bonn Climate Change Conference - June 2019, which 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
Workshop on Long-Term Climate Finance
Delegates gather for the in-session workshop on long-term climate finance.
Martin Frick, Senior Director for Policy and Programme Coordination, UNFCCC Secretariat
A slide showing people who have benefitted from climate finance around the world.
Co-Facilitator Mattias Frumerie, Sweden
Co-Facilitator Zaheer Fakir, South Africa
Panel speakers during the session.
Keywan Riahi, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Preety Malhotra Bhandari, Asian Development Bank
Participants listen during the session.
Delegates break out into four discussion groups focused on: provision of financial and technical support; mobilization, delivery of and access to finance; effectiveness of climate finance; and biennial submissions on strategies and approaches.
Multilateral Assessment
The first day of the multilateral assessment (MA) took place, part of the international assessment and review (IAR) for developed countries, where they are assessed on their progress in meeting their 2020 targets.
Patrick Suckling, Australia
Saviour Vassallo, Malta
Donald Cooper, Director of Mitigation, Data and Analysis, UNFCCC Secretariat
Anette Ejersted, Denmark
Heike Summer, Liechtenstein
Delegates from Monaco
Jaivardhan Ramanlal Bhatt, India
Carlos Fuller, Belize
7th Dialogue on Action for Climate Empowerment
The room is filled to capacity as delegates attend the 7th dialogue on Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE).
George Marshall, Climate Outreach
Helmut Hojesk, Austria, and Alice Gaustad, Norway
Ardina Purbo, Indonesia
Kartikeya Sarabhai, Centre for Environment Education, India
Gregg Walker, Oregon State University, and Silke Bölts, Youth NGOs (YOUNGOs)
Co-Facilitators Bob Natifu, Uganda, and Roberta Ianna, Italy
Consultations throughout the Day
SBI/SBSTA informal consultations on matters relating to the forum on the impact of the implementation of response measures serving the Convention, the Kyoto Protocol, and the Paris Agreement.
SBSTA contact group on methodological issues under the Paris Agreement.
SBSTA informal consultations on matters relating to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement.
SBSTA informal consultations on research and systematic observation.
SBSTA/SBI informal consultations on the Koronivia joint work on agriculture.
Family photo of Poznan strategic programme on technology transfer delegates.
Around the Venue
Carlos Lopez, UNFCCC Secretariat
Catherine Abreu, Climate Action Network (CAN) Canada
Delegates from Saudi Arabia and South Africa
Jacob Werksman, EU
Chen Zhihua and Liu Yingzhi, China
Cleo Verkuijl, Stockholm Environment Institute, and Eddy Pérez, CAN
Anju Sharma, Oxford Climate Policy
Straws made from bamboo and take-away containers made from sugarcane bagasse are on display, part of an initiative by Greenway International to empower women in Nigeria, Ghana, Togo, and other African countries to engage in sustainable and environmentally-friendly enterprises.