USCIB & ICC to Convene Numerous Events at UN Climate Conference

L-R: Norine Kennedy (USCIB), Nick Campbell (Arkema) and Andrea Bacher (ICC)

As leaders and delegates from nearly 200 countries descend on Paris for the pivotal COP21 climate conference, USCIB and the International Chamber of Commerce are planning an array of timely and informative business-themed events. USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson led an American business delegation along with Norine Kennedy, vice president for strategic international engagement, energy and environment, to the UN climate change conference.

The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) will be convening and participating in a series of events to make the case for a robust global agreement that works with business to meet the climate challenge. The private sector has been vocal in calling for bold action in the run up to the historic climate negotiations in Paris.

If you’re headed to Paris for COP21 here are a number of key dates for your calendar:

Official Business and Industry Day

As the business focal point to the UN climate talks, ICC will be hosting a range of briefings and events for the private sector, including the official COP21 Business Day on December 4. The event, known in UN circles as BINGO day, will demonstrate the private sector’s commitment to an ambitious agreement and will explore how business is already taking action for a low-carbon, resilient economy. Key speakers include:

  • John Danilovich, Secretary General, International Chamber of Commerce
  • Laurent Fabius, Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development of France and President-Designate of COP 21 and CMP 11

Click here to learn more about this event.

USCIB-American Chamber of Commerce, Executive Briefing and High Level Roundtable Meeting for US Business”

One of the fundamental challenges facing governments at COP21 is how to animate the private sector’s innovation and investment and channel that to address climate change and adapt to its impacts. If the Paris outcomes don’t work with and for business, they will not deliver their full potential. Clearly, governments will need a fully engaged business community across all sectors to turn the Paris outcomes into action in the near and long terms.

On Saturday December 5, USCIB and AmCham in France will convene a high level business meeting at the halfway point of COP21 to:

  • Overview on the latest developments in the political process relevant to U.S. business engagement
  • Review U.S. business issues and achievements in support of COP21
  • Look ahead to U.S. business priorities and initiatives in the implementation and further elaboration of the Paris outcomes.

A draft agenda can be viewed here.

ICC Conference on Climate Change Related Disputes

A unique event looking at the role of alternative dispute resolution – including arbitration – in resolving climate change related disputes. The event will look at the possible “enforcement gap” under a COP21 deal and the potential role of arbitration in building confidence in a new global climate architecture.

This groundbreaking event is jointly organized by the ICC International Court of Arbitration, the International Bar Association, the Permanent Court of Arbitration and the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce.

Click here to learn more about this event.

#OurClimate Photographic Award – Winners Announcement

Over 600 professional and amateur photographers from more than 60 countries have submitted entries to the ICC Photographic Award 2015, an official COP21 event. The award is a celebration of artistic skill and outstanding photography which aims to draw attention to and stimulate dialogue around the global challenge of climate change.

The three award winners will be announced during a high-level ICC COP21 Gala Reception.

Be the first to know the winners! Follow this event on Twitter via @iccwbo and #OurClimate .

Energy for Tomorrow Conference

Climate change is transforming supply chains, operations and markets, creating new challenges and significant growth opportunities for forward-thinking business leaders and investors.

Hosted and moderated by New York Times journalists, the Energy for Tomorrow conference brings together powerful CEOs, influential policymakers, energy entrepreneurs and leading academics to uncover the technologies, strategies and investments that will drive success in the new low-carbon economy.

ICC Secretary General John Danilovich will be delivering his vision for climate policy beyond COP21 on the second day of this event on December 9.

Click here to learn more about this event.

BizMEF side-event on INDC’s

On December 10, the Major Economies Business Forum on Energy Security and Climate Change will host an official UNFCCC side-event on intended nationally-determined contributions (INDC’s)

Click here to learn more about USCIB’s COP21 events event.

Sustainable Innovation Forum

The Sustainable Innovation Forum will convene cross-sector participants from business, government, finance, UN, non-governmental organizations and civil society to create an unparalleled opportunity to bolster business innovation and bring scale to the emerging green economy.

Cherie Nursalim, vice chairman of Giti Group and ICC Executive Board Member, will be a speaker at the keynote plenary session “Sustainable supply chain innovation and the circular economy” on December 8.

Click here to register for this event.

ICC Calls for Collaboration to Tackle Climate Challenge

 

ICC Secretary General John Danilovich at the G20 Summit in Antalya, Turkey
ICC Secretary General John Danilovich at the G20 Summit in Antalya, Turkey

With less than two weeks to go to the United Nations Conference on climate change (COP21) and the conclusion of the G20 last weekend, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) continues to engage its network in more than 130 countries to advocate for a climate deal that engages business to fully address the climate challenge.

“ICC has underscored the need for the G20 to show leadership in engaging and collaborating with the private sector in an unprecedented way to tackle the climate challenge,” said Kersten-Karl Barth, chair of the ICC commission on the environment and energy.

As energy investment is expected to be the largest single area of overall infrastructure investment over the coming decades requiring $1-2 trillion per year over the coming decades, engagement of the private sector will be critical.

As the lead business representative to the UN climate talks, ICC supports an ambitious global agreement which works with business to speed emissions reductions and build climate resilience.

Invited by French Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius to speak on behalf of business and industry NGOs at the pre-COP meeting involving in Paris last Sunday, ICC Secretary General John Danilovich said: “Businesses are already innovating to develop the technological, organizational and financial solutions needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to adapt to changing climate patterns.

“But to scale up these solutions we need enhanced collaboration between business, and more importantly, between the public and private sectors.”

Danilovich led a business delegation at the G20 Summit in Antalya, Turkey in what was an important staging post ahead of COP21.

Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for strategic international engagement, energy and environment, attended the pre-COP and the Bonn negotiating sessions.

ICC national committees all over the world will also be promoting an ambitious global climate agreement which works with business with a series of events throughout the month of November:

USCIB Represents Business at Cool Earth Forum in Tokyo

USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson at a press conference in Lima, Peru on December 8. “If a global agreement on climate change doesn’t work for and with businesses, it just won’t work,” he said.
USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson at a press conference in Lima, Peru on December 8. “If a global agreement on climate change doesn’t work for and with businesses, it just won’t work,” he said.

As the world prepares for the pivotal Paris COP21 summit meeting on climate change, the role of innovation – and the proper policies to catalyze the dissemination of greener technologies around the world – is emerging as a critical issue.

USCIB attended the 2nd Innovation for Cool Earth Forum (ICEF2) on October 6-7 in Tokyo.  ICEF2, convened at the initiative of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, focused on promoting technological innovation as a means to address climate change. The two-day forum brought together 1,000 researchers, business representatives and policymakers from around the globe to present a broad range of innovative technologies, and discuss what innovative measures should be developed, how the innovation should be promoted, and how cooperation and public private partnership should be enhanced.

USCIB, as part of the Major Economies Business Forum (BizMEF), worked with the Japanese business organization, Keidanren, to attract business participation, and ensure private sector views were reflected.

USCIB President and CEO  Peter Robinson was invited to address the ICEF2 Plenary. Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for environment, energy and strategic international engagement also attended the Tokyo meetings. Robinson stressed the importance of strengthened enabling frameworks for innovation in the global marketplace – in policy, markets and institutions, both inside and outside the United Nations. In particular, a successful outcome in the UN climate negotiations would demonstrate work in synergy with trade, markets and intellectual property right protection.

Robinson emphasized that a successful UNFCCC (UN Framework Convention on Climate Change) implementation for greenhouse gas reduction and societal adaptation and resilience would need to rely on innovation from business, across every sector and from multiple energy sources, in both developed and developing countries, from companies large and small.

At another ICEF2 session on business engagement, Robinson spoke about institutional evolution underway in the UNFCCC, which has changed significantly in the 20 years since its inception, especially in its interactions with business and other stakeholders.

Robinson said: “The challenge in Paris at COP21 is how to also reflect and integrate these non-state actor resources – in other words, can the Paris outcomes promote institutional innovation that features private sector engagement.”

He commented on the worrying absence of references to business in the current Paris outcome negotiating text, and highlighted the necessity for recognized business involvement in implementation and policy consultation.

While in Tokyo, Robinson also represented U.S. business at the 3rd meeting of the Paris Business Dialogue on technological innovation, convened by Laurence Tubiana, climate envoy, France and Gerard Mestrallet, CEO, Engie.

ICC Launches Climate Website on the Road to COP21

cop21_slider_sourceIn less than 50 days, over 40,000 participants will converge in Paris to conclude talks on a new global climate agreement. As the business focal point for the United Nations climate talks and the landmark Paris Climate Conference (COP21), the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has launched a one-stop website to mobilize business in the run up to and during the two-week conference.

Launched during Climate Week, the dynamic website provides overviews of and access to global business positions and recommendations. The website’s newsroom will help visitors keep pace with developments, providing easy access to the latest climate policy news, ICC press releases, speeches, videos and infographics.

The user-friendly ‘Road to COP21′ website also provides a comprehensive overview of the range of briefings and events hosted by ICC and partners during COP21. These include the official COP21 Business Day on December 4 and the International New York Times’ Energy for Tomorrow 2015 conference on December 8.

“The COP21 website is ICC’s response to the need for bespoke support services for member companies of the world business organization,” said ICC Secretary General John Danilovich. “Our aim is to ensure that everything business needs to navigate COP21 is just a click away.”

Visit cop21.iccwbo.org

#OurClimate ICC Photographic Award 2015

2015 COP21 Photo Award facebook_01This year, the International Chamber of Commerce launched the first annual ICC Photographic Award, a celebration of artistic skill and outstanding photography which aims to draw attention to—and stimulate dialogue around—the global challenge of climate change.

The award invites professional and amateur photographers from all over the world to submit applications reflecting on the theme of #OurClimate: from the causes and impacts of a changing climate, to our response (past, present or future), to the single biggest challenge facing humanity.

“The winning photographs will be exhibited alongside a selection of shortlisted images that most powerfully illustrate the theme of #OurClimate,” said ICC Secretary General John Danilovich. “The exhibition will be held in December 2015 during the Paris Climate Conference at ICC Global Headquarters in Paris.”

The winners will be chosen by a high-level judging panel—including ICC and USCIB Chairman Terry McGraw, Christiana Figures of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and Arancha Gonzalez of the International Trade Center—and will be announced at ICC’s COP21 gala reception on December 8.

The Award is open to all photographers—whether amateur, professional or student—who are invited to submit between 1 to 3 thought-provoking and captivating images exploring the theme of #OurClimate.

The jury members will award three prizes:

  • First prize: € 2,000
  • Second prize: € 1,000
  • ICC Young Photographer of the Year (26 years or under): € 1,000

To learn more about the award and terms of entry, visit: iccwbo.org/photoaward

White House, USCIB Members Launch American Business Action on Climate Change Pledge

White_HouseUSCIB welcomes the leadership announcements made today at the White House by several of its members, including Coca-Cola, Google, Microsoft, Pepsico, UPS and Walmart as part of the American Business Action on Climate Change Pledge.  These and other USCIB members have been moving ahead to provide innovation, investment and implementation to complement the international community’s efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate risks under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

USCIB’s President and CEO Peter Robinson called this the most recent proof that U.S. business is in the vanguard of global citizenship in advancing sustainability in the context of energy access and security.  “USCIB is strongly committed to a successful outcome at the Paris conference this December,” he said. “This announcement highlights how critical it is to engineer business into the Paris agreement in order to tap business action and invite business input to inform cost effective policy and practice to address climate change.”

USCIB is the U.S. affiliate of the International Chamber of Commerce and a U.S. partner of the Major Economies Business Forum (BizMEF).  It has represented U.S. business interests in the UNFCCC since 1993.  Please check its climate change website for continuing updates of its climate change positions and plans for COP21.

A Turning Point for International Climate Policy: ICC North American Regional Consultation

Bachus_Craft_Norine
L-R: James Bacchus (ICC & Greenberg Traurig), William Craft (U.S. Department of State) and Norine Kennedy (USCIB)

USCIB convened the North American Business Consultation  on Climate Change on June 23 in Washington, D.C.; this session, organized with the International Chamber of Commerce, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce and the International Emissions Trading Association, highlighted U.S. and Canadian business priorities for the U.N. climate agreement to be finalized in Paris this December.

In his opening comments to the day-long conference, with over 80 participants including government officials, business leaders, United Nations delegates, and academics, USCIB’s President and CEO, Peter Robinson stated: “USCIB has followed climate change for 20 plus years, and while the issues have evolved, become broader, been through ups and downs in the U.N. negotiations, it has remained a priority for member companies.  And en route to Paris, we see it evolving again, to include a strong element of corporate citizenship and social equity.”

2015 is a defining year for international climate change cooperation when governments will reach a new, long-term climate agreement on greenhouse gas reductions while pursuing global adaptation and resilience to the effects of climate change. Delivering on the UN’s far-reaching commitments will rely on business investment, innovation, new markets and engagement. The resulting economic and energy transformation will impact the business community across every sector, offering opportunities and posing challenges.

Ann Condon (GE), chair of USCIB’s Environment Committee, explained that climate, good governance and job creation are all issues that must be addressed together, and that the bigger picture of sustainability will rely on integration of the UN Post 2015 Development Agenda and the U.N. climate framework. Given the dynamic forces at work for businesses in the current global economy, Condon stressed the importance pursuing economic growth de-linked from carbon emissions.

The North American Public Private Dialogue is the second in a series of consultations organized by ICC to mobilize the voice of business ahead of the 21st UN Conference of the Parties (COP) in Paris in December, where member governments will finalize the international climate agreement. The inaugural dialogue took place in Mexico on April 15, to be followed by meetings in Asia later this year.

The Road to COP21 in Paris: Government, Business and NGO Perspectives

Florini
Karen Florini, deputy special envoy, climate change, U.S. Department of State

The event’s morning speakers presented U.S. and Canadian government positions for the Paris agreement, and talked about how the role of business could be reflected in Paris outcomes.  A particular focus was on national emission reduction pledges, known as “Intended Nationally Determined Contribution” (INDCs) from the U.S. and Canada. USCIB has advocated involving business in the preparation and analysis of INDCs.

Karen Florini of the U.S. Department of State explained that the United States believes there should be a clear role for non-state actors in the climate agreement, and that Paris 2015 represents an opportunity for nations to cooperate and pursue a low carbon path to prosperity.

IPR protection is indispensable for technological progress, and Florini indicated that the UN climate agreement was not the right vehicle to address IP issues.  She urged all stakeholders, including business, to show support for COP21 and the agreement, because inaction on climate change is not an option.

Other participants echoed Florini’s comments and said that the Paris 2015 agreement is not a silver bullet that will solve climate change, but it will set the stage for further international commitment to address a global problem.

In addition to Florini, other speakers included Lynn Monastesse, Environment Canada, Patricia Beneke, Executive Director of the U.N. Environment Programme’s North American Regional Office, and Helen Mountford, Senior Economist of the World Resources Institute.  On the U.S. INDC, Christo Artusio, Director of the Office of Global Change, the U.S. Department of State explained that the U.S. communicated its pledge and other “up front” information to facilitate the clarity, transparency, and understanding of U.S. climate programs as part of its commitments under the UNFCCC. He said it is important for all countries to be as transparent as possible about their climate pledges. Finally, Artusio noted that the U.S. INDC does not envision the use of international market mechanisms at this time.

Panellists discussed the role of business in the UNFCCC, business experiences with market based approaches in North America and the role of private sector technology innovation and deployment.  Main points included:

  • the importance of government engaging with business across the entire horizon of UNFCCC policy and technical deliberation, including on the design, assessment and implementation of  INDCs.
  • Elisabeth Best of Qualcomm talked about the many uses of innovation for climate change, not just via energy technologies but in IT applications, which then support smart grids, energy efficiency and other related efforts.
  • The experience of carbon markets at the state and provincial level in North America, along with voluntary efforts, have delivered reductions, along with experiences with how and where such market-based approaches make the best policy option.  Katie Sullivan, IETA, placed strong emphasis on the need to maintain and strengthen carbon markets as a means for countries to meet their climate policy commitments, and give countries the option to link their markets where it made sense to do so.

Leonardo Martinez-Diaz, the U.S Department of Treasury, spoke about recent activities of the Green Climate Fund (GCF), intended to assist in mobilizing finance and investment for developing countries under the UNFCCC.  Mr Martinz-Diaz indicated that the GCF is “open for business,” with a strong interest in reducing risk and working with business to mobilize financial resources to address mitigation and adaptation needs in the international community.

Fighting Climate Change with Trade

In addition to reviewing national and international climate policy from government and private sector perspectives, the meeting considered the role that other economic agreements and institutions will play in broadening and supporting climate policy and implementation.

ICC and USCIB Chairman Terry McGraw introduced William Craft, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Trade Policy and Programs in the Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs of the U.S. Department of State, who discussed the importance of using the U.S. trade agenda to help support ambitious climate policy and raise environmental standards.  McGraw noted the timeliness of the discussion given recent developments on Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), also known as “Fast Track.”

Craft noted that modern trade deals will continue to include strong environmental standards. He said that the United States is taking the lead in pushing forward the World Trade Organization’s Environmental Goods Agreement (EGA), which will reduce and remove tariffs on green products, improving global access to technologies that will help reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  The EGA will be a win-win for U.S. exporters and the global commons, Craft said.

He concluded by explaining that the intersection of trade and the environment lies at the heart of U.S. bilateral negotiations with China and Brazil, and that it is possible to secure trade deals with strong environmental standards while also creating economic  opportunities for business.

James Bacchus, Greenberg Traurig and Chair of ICC’s Trade and Investment Commission, explained the challenges of addressing potential conflicts between trade rules and climate protection, including with regard to “like products.”  He indicated that current trade rules would have to adapt to the diverse national approaches to climate policy that will arise from an INDC-based agreement to be finalized in Paris.

In her concluding remarks, USCIB’s Norine Kennedy stressed that all markets, including carbon markets, are important and necessary for a climate-friendly transformation of the global economy. “Governments must pledge to keep markets open so that cleaner technologies, energy and solutions can spread efficiently and profitably,” Kennedy said. Governments must also protect intellectual property rights, because the innovation needed for a climate-friendly transformation won’t occur if IPR protection is  compromised in an international climate agreement.

Also on June 24, ICC unveiled the 2015 updated Business Charter for Sustainable Development, which sets out a framework to enable companies to place sustainability at the heart of their operations – from staff recruitment to the development of new products and services.

USCIB and its global network have been  joined USCIB in arguing  for recognized consultative business engagement in the UN climate talks. Earlier last month ICC Secretary General John Danilovich wrote a letter to the editor of the Financial Times explaining that a wide range of policy and market approaches will be needed to scale up the pace of  reducing greenhouse gas emissions; there is no single bullet, and each country will tailor its “package” of actions to suit its environment and economic circumstances. And in another letter to the editor of the New York Times, USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson argues that countries should offer trade incentives rather than punitive tariffs to reduce carbon emissions and spur the deployment and use of greener energy technologies.

View photos of the North American Public-Private Dialogue on Climate Change (Flickr)

View speaker presentations from the dialogue

At UN Climate Talks in Bonn, Negotiators Make Incremental Progress

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Continuing the march to COP21 in Paris, governments wrapped up two weeks of negotiations in Bonn, Germany yesterday under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. While that march has been at a snail’s pace, it has made some limited progress, according to Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for environment and energy, who took part in the talks.

“Negotiators were able move the draft negotiating text forward with a bit of streamlining,” Kennedy said. “But the contentious issues of finance, reduction commitments and the role of carbon markets remain and there is still a long way to go, with only 10 official negotiating days before the Paris Climate Conference.”  Business is watching discussions of technology closely, as well as emerging issues of liability for loss and damage due to climate change, and the role that markets will be allowed to play for countries meeting their reductions commitments.

The Bonn meeting, attended by over 4000 representatives of countries, the U.N., business and NGOs, was opened by France’s Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius.  Governments are seeking to avoid a repeat of the collapse of the Copenhagen climate talks in 2009, and build a longer term durable agreement based on national pledges of greenhouse gas reductions and other actions.

Kennedy reports that, given the complexity of issues and multiple proposals, countries have now asked co-chairs of the negotiating process to speed up the pace, and to produce a “non paper” that would be a tool to move the text closer to the legal form needed for a binding agreement.

“Negotiators were asked to limit their comments to edits and restructuring, rather than substance,” according to Kennedy. “There was limited time dedicated to so-called cross-cutting issues, such as the legal form of the agreement, differentiation of commitments across countries, etc.”  Countries are showing increased interest in the role that non-state actors, such as cities and the private sector, can play in advancing climate action complementary to government implementation.

Business representatives from U.S., European, Japanese and international business organizations, including the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), were invited to make statements during the course of the Bonn talks.  USCIB statements underscored the need for a recognized interface for business with the UNFCCCC. In addition to Kennedy, USCIB was represented by Nick Campbell (Arkema).

Click here to access USCIB’s information and resources page on business engagement in the UN climate talks.

The Big Idea: UN Climate Talks: Why the Private Sector Needs to Be Involved Now

By Ann Condon and Norine Kennedy

un_headquarters_lo-resThomas Edison said, “Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and it looks like work.” For the United Nations climate change deliberations driving toward a global agreement in Paris this December, we would offer a variation on Edison’s observation. In this context, opportunity looks like a business person, ready to roll up their sleeves, invest in innovation, find new markets and become more competitive. USCIB wants to make sure the negotiators do not miss that opportunity.

And it goes beyond an opportunity. In our view, engagement with the private sector is imperative from both an economic and environmental standpoint. We need to manage and address the risks of climate change, and doing so requires engaging all countries and societal partners. And this must happen cost-effectively, with job creation and shared prosperity, stimulating economic growth and development.

Can emissions reductions and economic growth really go hand in hand? The answer is an emphatic “Yes!” Moreover, we now have clear evidence that this is underway. In March, the International Energy Agency announced that the world had successfully decoupled economic activity from greenhouse gas emissions, with global GDP increasing by 3.3 percent in 2014, while emissions decreased. This was the first time in over 40 years that observed emissions declined without an economic downturn.

USCIB member companies have made important contributions to inform the discussions, with the goal of influencing policy and market outcomes, meeting societal expectations and, in the process, finding new opportunities and new markets.

The business community has a clear stake in being engaged in the UN negotiation process, to help policy makers understand the economic and business opportunities and consequences of their policy choices.

USCIB, which has been engaged in the process since negotiation of the original UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, is seeking to expand private-sector engagement throughout the course of 2015 and beyond the Paris summit to the period when national implementation begins.

To do this we are working through multiple channels:

  • Advocating directly to the U.S. government, both on specific elements of a global agreement and on the critical issue of the U.S. pledge (or INDC, for “intended nationally determined contribution”).
  • Working closely with our partners in the International Chamber of Commerce; which serves as the business focal point for the UN negotiations and is playing an increasingly important role as a champion of sensible policies.
  • Engaging with multiple organizations on the interplay between the UN climate talks and other initiatives such as the Sustainable Development Goals.
  • Forging stronger links between the business communities of the major emitting countries through the Major Economies Business Forum.

So how do USCIB member companies see a feasible and durable approach to climate, one that sets the stage to address these joint economic and environmental imperatives?

First, we want governments to provide a clear framework for international action on the many dimensions of climate change – including energy access and modernization to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and resilience and adaptation; with all large economies making national pledges to measure, monitor and report their activities.

Second, negotiators must find a way to mobilize and deploy $100 billion annually that governments pledged for climate mitigation and adaptation. You simply can’t get to a number that big without catalyzing private investment, which responds best to market incentives. For USCIB, open markets and trade are vehicles that spread investment and technology cost effectively and profitably; anything that hampers markets will slow the pace of climate action and make it needlessly expensive for companies and for society.

Third, and perhaps most importantly, the Paris summit must map out practical ways to include the private sector as a partner in the success of a global climate agreement. USCIB is seeking a recognized consultative role for business in all aspects of climate policy – setting priorities, informing policy options, taking action. As USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson remarked at the most recent UN climate conference in Lima, Peru: “If a global agreement doesn’t work for and with business, it won’t work.”

It is apparent that this is an idea whose time has come: the French government has called upon the private sector to be part of a shared agenda for action in Paris, and has signaled the importance of ongoing dialogue with business as a priority.

The international community has laid out a broad vision of 2015 as a critical fulcrum, where we can reinvent and reinforce economic and environmental imperatives, using both in markets and policy. For USCIB and its members, expectations are high. We will do our utmost to make the case for what we know will work best – open markets and trade, innovation and the enabling conditions for private sector investment — to address climate change challenges and move the global economy forward.

Ann Condon is director for resource and environment strategies at GE and chair of USCIB’s Environment Committee. Norine Kennedy is USCIB’s vice president for energy, environment and strategic international engagement.

USCIB Urges US to Engage Business on UN Climate Action

4991_image001USCIB urged senior U.S. cabinet officials to include business in talks about limiting greenhouse gas emissions as part of the United Nations’ global effort to develop a new international cooperative climate accord.

In December 2015, world leaders are expected to conclude a new UN climate agreement, the world’s first binding and universal agreement committing all countries to reduce carbon their emissions. This international agreement is built around each country’s individual Independent Nationally Determined Contribution (INDCs), or national pledge, whereby the country commits to reducing its carbon footprint by a certain amount in the coming decades.

The United States released its INDC proposal on March 31, unveiling a blueprint for cutting U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by nearly a third over the next 15 years. The private sector was not consulted during the drafting of America’s INDC proposal. Business is expected to support and finance the UN’s climate agreement; therefore business must be included in talks to inform the national pledges and the world’s climate change agenda at every step, from setting priorities, to crafting policy options, to taking action.

“We have a common interest in INDCs that are successful and synergistic with international regulatory frameworks and the global marketplace,” wrote USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson in a letter sent Secretary of State John Kerry, U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and other senior U.S. cabinet officials. “We believe that NDCs can be strengthened and aligned through consultation and coordination with business to discuss how proposed efforts will affect the economy and environment, where additional initiatives can supplement and add to INDC submissions and to seek advice on how to assess proposals by other nations.”

USCIB is a member of the Major Economies Business Forum on Energy Security and Climate Change (BizMEF), which comprises national and regional business organizations representing millions of companies all over the world. BizMEF members have participated in and shared at UN climate change conferences since the Copenhagen conference in 2009. BizMEF released a set of views on how business can contribute to the development and implementation of INDCs:

  • Business has a wealth of knowledge, experience and expertise to offer concerning creation and dissemination of innovative technologies and approaches to manage risk and promote opportunities that should be a the very heart of discussions – formal and informal, domestic and international – about what INDCs could achieve.

 

  • Early and continuous involvement of business (and others) will be essential to help understand the feasibility and implications of proposed INDCs. Business can also provide insight on implications of the entire portfolio of proposed INDCs for global commerce, investment, competitiveness and aggregate consequences for emissions and the economy.

 

  • Business has significant experience in measuring, reporting and verification which will be essential to assess policy impacts, environmental integrity and comparative efforts among nations.

As negotiations intensify around the UN climate agreement set to be finalized in Paris in December, USCIB encourages all governments to consult with business going forward to help understand and assess each country’s national pledge.