Un citation paris agreement

The Paris Agreement was adopted on 12 December 2015 and came into force less than a year later, on 4 November 2016. Although the 1997 Kyoto Protocol also technically remains in force, the Paris Agreement has, in effect, superseded the Kyoto Protocol as the principal regulatory instrument governing the global response to climate change.

The Paris Agreement seeks to find a middle ground – a “Goldilocks” solution – between the contrasting models of the Kyoto Protocol and the 2009 Copenhagen Accord. It does so along three dimensions:

Prescriptiveness – Like the Copenhagen Accord, the Paris Agreement takes a bottom-up approach to the substance of climate change policy, allowing parties to nationally determine their contributions to address climate change, in contrast to the Kyoto Protocol, which prescribed emissions limitation targets from the top-down, through international negotiations. But, unlike the Copenhagen Accord, the Paris Agreement sets forth detailed rules on accounting and transparency to promote accountability and ambition.
Legal form – Like the Kyoto Protocol and unlike the Copenhagen Accord, the Paris Agreement is a treaty within the meaning of international law, but not all its provisions establish legal obligations. Most importantly, parties do not have an obligation to achieve their nationally determined contributions (NDCs) to address climate change – thus, in that respect, NDCs are not legally binding.
Differentiation – Unlike the Kyoto Protocol, which sharply differentiated between developed and developing countries (prescribing emission reduction targets for Annex I parties but no new commitments for non-Annex I parties), the Paris Agreement takes a nuanced approach to differentiation. With respect to mitigation, it establishes the same basic procedural obligations for all parties, but allows countries to self-differentiate their substantive mitigation contributions through their NDCs. With respect to finance, it imposes financial obligations only on developed country parties, but encourages other parties to provide support voluntarily. And with respect to transparency, it establishes a common transparency framework but gives carefully defined flexibility to those developing countries that need it based on lack of capacity.

The Paris Agreement’s hybrid approach to the issues of prescriptiveness, legal form, and differentiation allowed it to achieve virtually universal acceptance and hence be global in scope. After years of often contentious negotiations, the consensus adoption of the Paris Agreement represented a considerable achievement. Nevertheless, the initial round of NDCs submitted by parties pursuant to the Paris Agreement do not put the world on a pathway to limiting global warming to well below 2°C, much less 1.5°C, the temperature goals articulated in the Paris Agreement (this gap was acknowledged by the parties in the decision adopting the Paris Agreement, Decision 1/CP.21, para. 17). The ability of the Paris Agreement to achieve the objective of the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), namely, to prevent dangerous anthropogenic climate change, will thus depend on whether the agreement’s so-called “ambition mechanism” works as intended to ratchet up the level of ambition of parties’ NDCs over time.

Historical context

The Paris Agreement is the third international legal agreement addressing the climate change problem.

The first agreement was the UNFCCC, which established the basic system of governance for the climate change issue, including:

The overall objective of the regime, namely, to limit atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases (GHGs) to levels that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic climate change.
Guiding principles, including the principles of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities (CBDR-RC), precaution, and cost-effectiveness.
General obligations on all parties to develop policies to mitigate and adapt to climate change and to report on their emissions and policies.
Differentiation of commitments based on lists of parties set forth in two annexes. Parties listed in Annex I (roughly corresponding to “developed” countries) had a non-binding goal to return their emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000 as well as more stringent reporting obligations; parties listed in Annex II (consisting of Annex I countries minus countries with economies in transition) also were given obligations to provide finance and technology to developing countries; and parties not listed in Annex I (generally referred to as “non-Annex I parties” and often equated with “developing countries,” at least as of 1992) had only the general obligations mentioned above.
Institutions, including the Conference of the Parties (COP), which serves as the highest governing body; Subsidiary Bodies on Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) and on Implementation (SBI); Secretariat; and financial mechanism.

The second climate change agreement was the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which established an elaborate regulatory regime to limit emissions of Annex I parties. Important elements of the Kyoto Protocol’s regulatory approach included:

Legally binding, economy-wide emissions limitation targets for Annex I countries. The initial round of targets set forth in the Protocol applied to a five-year commitment period running from 2008-2012, with the expectation that new sets of targets would be adopted for subsequent commitment periods.
Several market mechanisms to allow Annex I parties to implement their emissions targets flexibly, including emissions trading and the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).
Detailed reporting requirements on Annex I parties.
A compliance mechanism that included an “enforcement” branch.
A bifurcated approach to differentiation that imposed legal limits on Annex I party emissions and no new commitments on non-Annex I parties.

Following the adoption in 2001 of the Marrakesh Accords (Decisions 2-24/CP.7), which set forth detailed rules to operationalize the Kyoto Protocol, and the Protocol’s entry into force three years later, attention turned to the issue of what to do after 2012, when the Protocol’s first commitment period ended. In 2005, the parties to the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol decided to proceed on two tracks: one track to negotiate a second commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol, the other track to consider “long-term cooperative action” under the UNFCCC. It quickly became apparent, however, that relatively few countries were willing to accept further emissions reduction commitments under the Kyoto Protocol. The long-term-cooperative-action track therefore became the focus of efforts to broaden the regime to encompass a greater share of global emissions. This track was initiated by the 2007 Bali Action Plan (Decision 1/CP.13) and led first to the 2009 Copenhagen Accord (Decision 2/CP.15), then the 2010 Cancun Agreements (Decision 1/CP.16), and eventually, in transmuted form, to the Paris Agreement.

Negotiating history

The negotiations resulting in the Paris Agreement were launched in 2011 by the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (Decision 1/CP.17). The impetus for the negotiations was the desire of some parties – in particular, the European Union and small island developing States – to develop a legally binding agreement, in contrast to both the Copenhagen Accord, which was a political agreement, and the Cancun Agreements, which were adopted as a COP decision and hence lacked legal force. The Durban Platform established an ad hoc working group (the ADP) to negotiate a new instrument by 2015, but States were unable to agree on the legal form of the instrument, so the Durban Platform instead used the deliberately ambiguous formulation, “a protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal force” (Decision 1/CP.17, para. 2). Unlike the Berlin Mandate (Decision 1/CP.1), which initiated the Kyoto Protocol negotiations and spelled out in considerable detail the substance of the instrument to be negotiated (the 1995 Berlin Mandate, Decision 1/CP.1, specified that the agreement to be negotiated establish quantitative emissions limitation targets for Annex I parties and no new commitments for non-Annex I parties), the Durban Platform left the substance of the Paris Agreement completely open. Notably, it contained no reference to the UNFCCC’s annexes or to the principle of CBDR-RC, instead simply stating that the new instrument would be “under the Convention” and “applicable to all Parties.”

Important milestones in the Paris negotiations included:

The 2013 Warsaw decision on “Further Advancing the Durban Platform,” which pointed the way to the hybrid legal form of the Paris Agreement by articulating the concept of nationally determined “contributions” rather than “commitments” (Decision 1/CP.19, para. 2(b))—a formulation that explicitly left open whether NDCs would be legally binding.
The 2014 Lima Call for Action, which elaborated informational requirements for countries’ intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs) (Decision 1/CP.20, para. 14), to ensure that they clearly articulated what a country was pledging to do (in contrast to some countries’ pledges under the Copenhagen Accord, which were not transparent or understandable because they were specified so vaguely).
The joint announcement by the United States and China in November 2014, which put forward a refined version of the principle of CBDR-RC, adding the element, “in light of different national circumstances.”

As has been the pattern in the United Nations climate change negotiations from the start, progress was slow initially, and the ADP was not able to produce an initial negotiating text until February 2015. Nevertheless, throughout 2015, States began to submit INDCs and, by the beginning of the Paris Conference, more than 180 States had done so. During the Paris Conference itself, the COP president, French foreign minister Laurent Fabius, issued a series of draft texts, based on consultations with the different negotiating groups, which progressively narrowed the open issues, leading to adoption of the Paris Agreement by acclamation on 12 December 2015.

The COP decision adopting the Paris Agreement (Decision 1/CP.21) elaborated some of its provisions and established a work program to develop additional rules, modalities, procedures, and guidelines to flesh out and operationalize the often-barebones provisions of the Paris Agreement itself. Negotiation of the “Paris Rulebook” took another three years and was mostly completed with the adoption in 2018 of a comprehensive set of decisions at COP-24 in Katowice, Poland, addressing mitigation, adaptation, finance, transparency, the periodic global stocktake, and the new implementation and compliance mechanism (Decisions 3-20/CMA.1), leaving only the rules for the article 6 market-based approaches left to be determined.

Overview of the Paris Agreement

The Paris Agreement is a comprehensive agreement addressing all aspects of the climate change problem, with provisions on mitigation, adaptation, loss and damage, finance, technology, capacity building, transparency, implementation and compliance, and institutions. Key elements of what might be called the “Paris paradigm” include the following:

First, it is global.
Second, it has a hybrid legal form, as discussed above: it is a treaty within the meaning of international law, but not all its provisions are legally binding.
Third, it abandons the annex-based approach of the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol, instead elaborating a more nuanced, carefully calibrated approach to differentiation.
Fourth, it establishes ambitious temperature, emissions, adaptation, and finance goals.
Fifth, it adopts a bottom-up approach that allows States to nationally determine the substance of their mitigation and adaptation actions.
Sixth, it relies on transparency rather than legal bindingness to promote accountability.
Seventh, its “ambition mechanism” establishes an iterative process to promote progressively stronger NDCs over time.
Summary of key provisions

The Paris Agreement establishes both temperature and emissions goals that supplement the UNFCCC’s objective of stabilizing concentrations of greenhouse gases at levels that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system (UNFCCC art. 2). Article 2.1(a) specifies two temperature goals: first, to hold temperature increase to “well below” 2°C above pre-industrial levels; second, to pursue efforts to limit temperature increase to 1.5°C. Article 4.1 adds two emissions goals: first, to reach global peaking of emissions as soon as possible and to undertake rapid reductions thereafter; and second, to achieve net zero emissions in the second half of the century.

To achieve these goals, article 4 sets forth a number of legal obligations on parties, including to:

Prepare and communicate an NDC every five years, with the information necessary for clarity, transparency and understanding (ICTU) (arts 4.2, 4.9).
Maintain successive NDCs (art. 4.2).
Account for their NDCs (art. 4.13).
Pursue domestic measures with the aim of achieving the objective of their NDCs (art. 4.2).

Notably, these obligations apply to all parties, with the exception of least developed countries and small island developing States, which may develop strategies, plans and actions reflecting their special circumstances (art. 4.6). Rather than differentiate obligations in terms of categories of countries (such as “developed” and “developing” or Annex I and non-Annex I), article 4 allows parties to self-differentiate their actions through their NDCs. The Paris Rulebook decision on mitigation provides further guidance on the obligations of parties to provide ICTU and to account for their NDCs (Decision 4/CMA.1). Although ordinarily COP decisions are not legally binding, the article 4 provisions on ICTU and accounting provide that parties are to act “in accordance with” relevant COP decisions (technically, decisions of the Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement, or CMA), making the Paris Rulebook decisions on ICTU and accounting binding on parties.

In addition to establishing legal obligations, article 4 articulates several normative expectations, including that:

Successive NDCs will represent a progression and reflect the highest possible ambition (art. 4.3).
Developed country parties should undertake absolute economy-wide emission reduction targets, with developing countries encouraged to move towards such targets over time (art. 4.4).
All parties should strive to formulate and communicate long-term low greenhouse gas emission development strategies (art. 4.19).

B. Market mechanisms

Article 6 allows parties to implement their NDCs through cooperation with other parties. It provides for two such voluntary cooperation mechanisms:

First, article 6.2 allows parties on a voluntary basis to internationally transfer mitigation outcomes (i.e., emission reductions) and to use these internationally transferred mitigation outcomes (ITMOs) to achieve their NDCs – in essence, a form of emissions trading. Article 6.2 requires that parties, when engaging in ITMOs, promote sustainable development, ensure environmental integrity and transparency, and apply robust accounting rules to ensure no double counting.
Second, article 6.4 establishes an offset mechanism, similar to the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism, and directs the CMA to adopt rules, modalities, and procedures for the new mechanism.

As of July 2021, the negotiation of rules on the article 6.2 and 6.4 mechanisms were still ongoing.

C. Adaptation and Loss and Damage

In contrast to the Paris Agreement’s mitigation provisions, which establish comparatively precise goals and legal obligations, the agreement’s adaptation provisions are more general and, for the most part, are hortatory and expository rather than obligatory. Articles 2.1(b) and 7.1 articulate the general goals of enhancing adaptive capacity, fostering and strengthening climate resilience, and reducing vulnerability. The only obligation relating to adaptation contained in article 7 is to engage in adaptation planning processes and even this is qualified by the modifier, “as appropriate” (art. 7.9). Otherwise, article 7 simply recognizes that the need for adaptation is significant (art. 7.4), that adaptation action should be country driven and guided by the best available science (art. 7.5), that international cooperation is important and should be strengthened (arts. 7.6 and 7.7), and that parties should submit and periodically update adaptation communications, as appropriate (art. 7.10).

Article 8 incorporates the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage (WIM) into the Paris Agreement and subjects it to the authority and guidance of the CMA. However, the COP decision adopting the Paris Agreement explicitly provides that article 8 shall not provide a basis for any liability or compensation (Decision 1/CP.21, para. 51).

Article 2.1(c) of the Paris Agreement establishes the goal of making “finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development.” This goal goes well beyond the traditional focus of climate finance on the provision of support to developing countries. It encompasses private as well as public financial flows and calls not only for increasing green finance flows to support low emission technologies and climate resilience, but also for phasing out brown finance flows used to fund greenhouse gas emitting technologies (such as coal-fired power plants).

Article 9 contains the only commitments in the Paris Agreement that continue to be differentiated along developed/developing country lines. Article 9.1 reiterates the commitment of developed countries under the UNFCCC to provide financial resources to assist developing countries mitigate and adapt to climate change, and article 9.5 requires developed countries to provide quantitative and qualitative information on a biennial basis about their financial support. In a break from earlier climate instruments, however, which were silent about the provision of financial support by other countries, article 9.2 seeks to enlarge the donor pool by “encouraging” other countries to provide financial support on a voluntary basis. Although article 9 does not specify any quantitative finance goal, the decision adopting the Paris Agreement extended through 2025 the collective finance goal set forth in the Copenhagen Accord – namely, that developed countries mobilize jointly US$100 billion per year from public and private sources for mitigation and adaptation in developing countries (Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 53).

Since the Paris Agreement does not make parties’ NDCs legally binding, it relies on transparency to hold countries accountable for achieving their NDCs. Accordingly, article 13 establishes an “enhanced transparency framework” (ETF) involving self-reporting by States and both technical expert and peer review. The ETF is applicable to all parties, albeit with flexibility for “those developing countries that need it in the light of their capacities” (art. 13.2). It consists of three elements:

First, biennial transparency reports (BTRs), including the following required elements:
A national inventory of greenhouse gas emissions and removals.
The information necessary to track progress in implementing and achieving a party’s NDC.
For developed countries, financial, technology transfer, and capacity building support provided to developing countries.
In addition to these required elements, the Paris Agreement recommends that parties provide information on climate change impacts and adaptation, and that developing countries provide information on financial, technology transfer and capacity building support needed and received.
Second, technical expert review to consider the consistency of the information provided by a party with the Paris Rulebook and to identify possible areas of improvement.
Third, peer review by the parties (called “a facilitative, multilateral consideration of progress”).

The Paris Rulebook decision on transparency (Decision 18/CMA.1) sets forth, in great detail, “common modalities, procedures, and guidelines” (MPGs) for the ETF, and is the longest decision in the Paris Rulebook, totaling 35 pages. It allows countries to self-determine whether they need flexibility based on lack of capacity, but carefully circumscribes this flexibility by: (1) specifying the provisions for which flexibility is available and the types of flexibility available, and (2) requiring that parties claiming flexibility specify their capacity constraints and provide an estimated time frame for addressing those constraints (Decision 18/CMA.1, para. 6).

F. Ambition mechanism / global stocktake

To achieve its goals, the Paris Agreement establishes an iterative process intended to increase ambition over time. Every five years:

Parties submit their NDCs.
Each party’s progress in achieving its NDC is subjected to technical expert and peer review.
The parties undertake a global stocktake of collective progress in achieving the Paris Agreement’s purpose and long-term goals.
Informed by the outcomes of the stocktake as well as the principle of progression in article 4.3, parties submit another round of NDCs and the cycle begins anew.

The global stocktake is intended to play a key role in the ambition mechanism by providing regular assessments of how well the parties are doing collectively in achieving the Paris Agreement’s goals. It includes a review of not only mitigation, but also adaptation and financial support. Stocktakes will be undertaken every five years, beginning in 2023.

G. Implementation and compliance

Article 15 establishes a facilitative, non-adversarial, and expert-based implementation and compliance mechanism, governed by a 12-member committee elected by the parties. The Paris Rulebook decision elaborating modalities and procedures for the new mechanism attempts to strike a balance between those countries that wanted the committee to play a “help desk” function, involving the provision of assistance to countries having compliance difficulties, and those that wanted the committee to play a more independent role in policing compliance by parties. Rather than allowing only self-referrals, the Paris Rulebook allows the committee to initiate proceedings, but only in carefully circumscribed circumstances, including: (1) when a report has “significant and persistent” inconsistencies with the rules, (2) to consider issues that would otherwise escape review (for example, failure by a party to submit an NDC or mandatory report), and (3) to consider systemic issues.

In general, the Paris Agreement makes use of the UNFCCC’s institutions, including the:

Conference of the parties (designated the Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement, or CMA) (art. 16)
Secretariat (art. 17)
Subsidiary bodies on scientific and technological advice (SBSTA) and on implementation (SBI) (art. 18)
Financial mechanism (art. 9.8).

In addition, the Paris Agreement establishes its own Implementation and Compliance Committee (art. 15), as noted above.

Influence on international environmental law

Although most of the Paris Agreement’s distinctive features have precursors or analogues, the intense international focus on the climate change issue will likely make the Paris Agreement unusually influential. Elements of the agreement that may influence international environmental law more generally include:

Building ambition over time – The Paris COP was important not only in adopting the Paris Agreement, but also in creating a political moment that induced both States and non-State actors to come forward with more ambitious climate policies. The Paris Agreement’s ambition mechanism is intended to create similar political moments every five years, which focus political attention on the climate change problem and generate pressure to do more. Whether the Paris Agreement will succeed in creating these political moments remains to be seen. But this approach to generating ambition is one of the Paris Agreement’s most innovative elements and might be applied to other international environmental problems.

Calibrating legal bindingness – The Paris Agreement successfully bridged the differences among States over the issue of legal bindingness by distinguishing the legal form of the overall instrument – the Paris Agreement is unquestionably a treaty within the meaning of international law – from the legal force of its particular provisions, which vary widely:

Some provisions create legal obligations – for example, article 4.2, which requires that each party shall submit an NDC every five years.
Some provisions are hortatory – for example, the first sentence of article 4.4, which recommends that developed countries should adopt economy-wide, absolute emission reduction targets.
Some provisions encourage action – for example, the second sentence of article 4.4, which encourages other parties to move towards economy-wide, absolute targets over time.
Some express general normative expectations – for example, article 4.3, which provides that successive NDCs will represent a progression and reflect a party’s highest possible ambition.
Some merely express relevant background understandings – for example, articles 7.2 and 7.4, which recognize that adaptation is a global challenge and that the current need for adaptation is significant.

Balancing international prescription and national discretion – The Paris Agreement is also carefully calibrated in balancing international prescription and national discretion. On the one hand, multilaterally agreed rules play an important role in promoting reciprocity and accountability, which are crucial given the collective action nature of the climate change problem. On the other hand, protecting national discretion is also crucial, given the embeddedness of the climate change problem in domestic policy and politics. The Paris Agreement largely leaves the substance of climate policy to national discretion and prescribes procedural rules. But it also reflects quite innovative combinations of prescription and discretion – for example, by allowing developing States to self-determine whether they face capacity constraints that warrant flexibility under the enhanced transparency framework, but requiring them to explain the nature of their capacity constraints and to provide a timeline for addressing those constraints. Similarly, the Paris Rulebook gives parties discretion in choosing the quantitative and qualitative indicators they use to track progress in achieving their NDCs, but requires them to be transparent about the indicators they use.

Nuanced differentiation – Finally, the Paris Agreement’s approach to differentiation is also quite nuanced, in contrast to earlier climate agreements. Only a few obligations are differentiated on a categorical basis, as was the case in the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol. Many obligations are not differentiated at all; others are self-differentiated; and others provide limited flexibility.

The Paris Agreement’s calibrated approach to the issues of legal bindingness, international prescription, and differentiation allowed it to bridge seemingly irreconcilable positions and be acceptable to all States. It could potentially be used as a model in addressing other international environmental issues that involve significant domestic sensitivities.

This Introductory Note was written in July 2021.

Related Materials

A. Legal Instruments

Paris Agreement, Paris, 12 December 2015.

B. Documents

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its first session, held in Berlin from 28 March to 7 April 1995, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.1: The Berlin Mandate, 7 April 1995.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its thirteenth session, held in Bali from 3 to 15 December 2007, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.13: Bali Action Plan, 14–15 December 2007.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its fifteenth session, held in Copenhagen from 7 to 19 December 2009, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 2/CP.15: Copenhagen Accord, 18–19 December 2009.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its sixteenth session, held in Cancun from 29 November to 10 December 2010, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.16: Cancun Agreements, 10–11 December 2010.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its seventeenth session, held in Durban from 28 November to 11 December 2011, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.17: Establishment of an Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action, 11 December 2011.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its nineteenth session, held in Warsaw from 11 to 23 November 2013, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.19: Further Advancing the Durban Platform, 23 November 2013.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its twentieth session, held in Lima from 1 to 14 December 2014, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.20: Lima Call for Action, 14 December 2014.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its twenty-first session, held in Paris from 30 November to 13 December 2015, Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties, Decision 1/CP.21: Adoption of the Paris Agreement.

C. Doctrine

D. Bodansky, “The Paris Climate Change Agreement – A New Hope?” American Journal of International Law, vol. 110, 2016, pp. 288-319.

D. Bodansky, J. Brunneé and L. Rajamani, International Climate Change Law, Oxford University Press, 2017.

D. Klein (ed.), The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: Analysis and Commentary, Oxford University Press, 2017.

J. Lin and A. Zahar, “Special Issue on the Paris Rulebook,” Climate Law, vol. 9, 2019, issues 1-2.

L. Rajamani, “Ambition and Differentiation in the 2015 Paris Agreement: Interpretive Possibilities and Underlying Politics,” International and Comparative Law Quarterly, vol. 65, 2016, pp. 493-514.

L. Rajamani and D. Bodansky, “The Paris Rulebook: Balancing International Prescriptiveness with National Discretion,” International and Comparative Law Quarterly, vol. 68, 2019, pp. 1023-40.

M. Roelfsema et al., “Taking Stock of National Climate Policies to Evaluate Implementation of the Paris Agreement,” Nature Communications, 2020, 11: 2096.

G. V. Claster and L. Reins, The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: A Commentary, Edward Elgar, 2021.

Various authors, “Special Issue: The Paris Agreement,” Review of European Community and International Environmental Law, vol. 25, issue 2, 2016.

Various authors, “Special Issue on the Paris Agreement,” Climate Law, vol. 6, issue 1-2, 2016.

In December 2011 in Durban, at the seventeenth session of the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (hereinafter “UNFCCC”) (see procedural history of the UNFCCC), the Parties launched a process to develop “a protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal force under the UNFCCC applicable to all Parties, through a subsidiary body under the UNFCCC”. In order to achieve this, the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (the “ADP”) (see report FCCC/CP/2011/9/Add.1, decision 1/CP.17, para. 2) was established at that session. The COP decided that the ADP should “complete its work as early as possible but no later than 2015” in order to adopt said “protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal force” at the twenty-first session of the COP and “for it to come into effect and be implemented from 2020” (see report FCCC/CP/2011/9/Add.1, decision 1/CP.17, para. 4). It also decided that the ADP should plan “its work in the first half of 2012, including, inter alia, on mitigation, adaptation, finance, technology development and transfer, transparency of action and support, and capacity-building, drawing upon submissions from Parties and relevant technical, social and economic information and expertise” (see report FCCC/CP/2011/9/Add.1, decision 1/CP.17, para. 5). It further decided that the process should raise the level of ambition and should be informed, inter alia, by the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (see report FCCC/CP/2011/9/Add.1, decision 1/CP.17, para. 6).

The ADP held its first session from 17 to 25 May 2012 in Bonn. At this session, the ADP adopted an agenda dividing its work into two workstreams (see report FCCC/ADP/2012/2). The first workstream, on the 2015 agreement, focused on matters related to paragraphs 2 to 6 of decision 1/CP.17 (agenda item 3(a)), while the second workstream, on pre-2020 ambition, focused on matters related to paragraphs 7 and 8 of decision 1/CP.17 (agenda item 3(b)). The eighteenth COP, in 2012 in Doha, welcomed the work of the ADP and decided that the ADP would consider elements for a draft negotiating text no later than at its session to be held in conjunction with the twentieth session of the COP, in 2014, with a view to making available a negotiating text before May 2015 (see report FCCC/CP/2012/8/Add.1, decision 2/CP.18, para. 9).

Throughout 2013 and 2014, the ADP conducted a series of round-table discussions, workshops, technical expert meetings and briefings under both workstreams, taking into consideration submissions from Parties and observer organizations as invited by the ADP.

At the nineteenth session of the COP, held in Warsaw from 11 to 23 November 2013, the Parties requested the ADP to accelerate its work (see report FCCC/CP/2013/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.19, para. 1). The COP also decided to request the ADP “to further elaborate, beginning at its first session in 2014, elements for a draft negotiating text, taking into consideration its work, including, inter alia, on mitigation, adaptation, finance, technology development and transfer, capacity-building and transparency of action and support”. It was also decided to invite all Parties to commence or to intensify domestic preparations for their intended nationally determined contributions, in the context of adopting a protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal force, and to communicate them, by the first quarter of 2015 by those Parties ready to do so, in a clear and transparent manner to facilitate the understanding of the intended contributions. Furthermore, the COP requested the ADP to identify, by the twentieth session of the COP, the information that Parties will provide when submitting their contributions (see report FCCC/CP/2013/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.19, para. 2(a), (b), (c)).

At the twentieth session of the COP, held in Lima from 1 to 14 December 2014, the Parties acknowledged the work made in elaborating the elements for a draft negotiating text contained in the annex to the decision 1/CP.20, titled “Lima Call for Climate Action” (see report FCCC/CP/2014/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.20, para. 5). The Parties confirmed that the ADP would complete its work as early as possible and decided that the ADP would intensify its work in order to make available a negotiating text before May 2015 (see report FCCC/CP/2014/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.20, paras. 1 and 6). It also requested the secretariat to communicate the negotiating text to Parties in accordance with provisions of the UNFCCC and the applied rules of procedure. Furthermore, it noted that such communication would not prejudice whether the outcome would be “a protocol, another legal instrument or an agreed outcome with legal force under the Convention applicable to all Parties” (see report FCCC/CP/2014/10/Add.1, decision 1/CP.20, para. 7).

From 8 to 13 February 2015, the ADP met in Geneva to develop the negotiating text based on the elements contained in the annex to the decision 1/CP.20, titled “Lima Call for Climate Action”. The ADP updated and further revised the language of the annex to decision 1/CP.20 (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/2, paras. 14 and 15). On 12 February 2015, an advance unedited version of the negotiating text was prepared, which accurately reflected the proposals of all Parties and served as the basis for the negotiations of the 2015 agreement (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/2, paras. 17 and 20).

The ADP met in Bonn from 1 to 11 June 2015 (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/3) and from 31 August to 4 September 2015 (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/4), to further develop the negotiating text.

From 19 to 23 October 2015, the ADP met in Bonn to work on the draft agreement that would be submitted at the twenty-first session of the COP (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/5). The two workstreams revised previous work on provisions such as those regarding definitions, purpose of the agreement, loss and damage, transparency of action and support, global stocktaking, technology development, transfer and capacity building, and final clauses. On 23 October 2015, a draft agreement and draft decision on workstreams 1 and 2 of the ADP was adopted (see Draft agreement and draft decision on workstreams 1 and 2 of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action, version of 23 October 2015).

From 29 November to 5 December 2015, during the first week of the COP in Paris, the ADP continued its work on the draft agreement (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/6). On 5 December, the ADP transmitted the text titled “Draft agreement and draft decision on workstreams 1 and 2 of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action” to the COP at its twenty-first session (see report FCCC/ADP/2015/L.6/Rev.1).

The twenty-first session of the COP took place in Paris from 30 November to 13 December 2015 and was attended by 196 Parties (see report FCCC/CP/2015/10). The Paris Agreement was adopted by the Parties on 12 December 2015 (see report FCCC/CP/2015/L.9/Rev.1). The Agreement was opened for signature in New York on 22 April 2016 and entered into force on 4 November 2016, in accordance with its article 21(1), which provided: “[t]his Agreement shall enter into force on the thirtieth days after the date on which at least 55 Parties to the Convention accounting in total for at least an estimated 55 per cent of the total global greenhouse gas emissions have deposited their instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession” (see report FCCC/CP/2015/L.9/Rev.1).

Selected preparatory documents
(in chronological order)

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its sixteenth session, held in Cancun from 29 November to 10 December 2010, Part Two: Action taken by the Conference of the Parties at its sixteenth session (FCCC/CP/2010/7/Add.2, 15 March 2011).

Statement delivered by Mr. Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations, Durban, South Africa, 6 December 2011.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its seventeenth session, held in Durban from 28 November to 11 December 2011, Part Two: Action taken by the Conference of the Parties at its seventeenth session (FCCC/CP/2011/9/Add.1, 15 March 2012).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the first part of its first session, held in Bonn from 17 to 25 May 2012 (FCCC/ADP/2012/2, 6 July 2012).

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its eighteenth session, held in Doha from 26 November to 8 December 2012, Part Two: Action taken by the Conference of the Parties at its eighteenth session (FCCC/CP/2012/8/Add.1, 28 February 2013).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the first and second parts of its second session, held in Bonn from 29 April to 3 May 2013 and from 4 to 13 June 2013 (FCCC/ADP/2013/2, 30 July 2013).

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its nineteenth session, held in Warsaw from 11 to 23 November 2013, Part two: Action taken by the Conference of the Parties at its nineteenth session (FCCC/CP/2013/10/Add.1, 31 January 2014).

Submission by Greece and the European Commission on behalf of the European Union and its Member States (the submission was supported by Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia), 28 May 2014.

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its twentieth session, held in Lima from 1 to 14 December 2014, Part two: Action taken by the Conference of the Parties at its twentieth session (FCCC/CP/2014/10/Add.1, 2 February 2015).

Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action, Negotiating text, second session, part eight, 8 to 13 February 2015, Geneva (FCCC/ADP/2015/1, 25 February 2015).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the eighth part of its second session, held in Geneva from 8 to 13 February 2015 (FCCC/ADP/2015/2, 1 April 2015).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the ninth part of its second session, held in Bonn from 1 to 11 June 2015 (FCCC/ADP/2015/3, 11 August 2015).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the tenth part of its second session, held in Bonn from 31 August to 4 September 2015 (FCCC/ADP/2015/4, 8 October 2015).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the eleventh part of its second session, held in Bonn from 19 to 23 October 2015 (FCCC/ADP/2015/5, 20 November 2015).

Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action on the twelfth part of its second session, held in Paris from 29 November to 5 December 2015 (FCCC/ADP/2015/6, 29 January 2016).

Draft Paris Outcome, Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action, second session, part twelve, Paris, 29 November to 5 December 2015 (FCCC/ADP/2015/L.6/Rev.1, 5 December 2015).

Report of the Conference of the Parties on its twenty-first session, held in Paris from 30 November to 13 December 2015, Part one: Proceedings (FCCC/CP/2015/10, 29 January 2016).

Conference of the Parties, twenty-first session, Paris, 30 November to 11 December 2015, Adoption of the Paris Agreement, Proposal by the President (FCCC/CP/2015/L.9/Rev.1, 12 December 2015).

For further information and documentation (including audio-visual material) on the Paris Agreement, see the official website of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

The Agreement entered into force on 4 November 2016. For the current participation status of the Agreement, as well as information and relevant texts of related treaty actions, see:

8 February 2015
First Round of 2015 UN Climate Talks Begin in Geneva, Switzerland.
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8 February 2015
First Round of 2015 UN Climate Talks Begin in Geneva, Switzerland.
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12 December 2015
Secretary-General Discusses Draft Text with His Advisors at COP21, Paris, France.
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12 December 2015
Closing Ceremony of COP21, Paris, France.
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22 April 2016
Opening of the Signing Ceremony for Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Opening of the Signing Ceremony for Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Secretary-General Meets Youth Representatives at Paris Climate Agreement Signing, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Civil Society Representative Addresses Signing Ceremony for Paris Agreement, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Environment Minister of Angola Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
President of Brazil Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Vice Premier of China Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Colombian President Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Lithuanian President Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Foreign Minister of Madagascar Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
President of Marshall Islands Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Polish Prime Minister Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Turkish Environment Minister Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
United States Secretary of State Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Prime Minister of Vanuatu Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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22 April 2016
Vietnamese Environment Minister Signs Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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7 October 2016
Deposit of Instruments of Ratification of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, United Nations Headquarters,
New York.
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