COP21 talks: Climate deal agreed by 195 states

Agreement adopted more than 24 hours after official end of fortnight-long conference

The Paris climate conference reached a successful end as historic deal is adopted. Video: Reuters

A “historic” deal to tackle climate change has been agreed by 195 countries at United Nations talks in Paris.

The international agreement was adopted more than 24 hours after the official end of the fortnight-long conference in the French capital, following days and nights of shuttle diplomacy and wrangling between countries.

The decision was greeted with huge cheers, tears and hugging and a standing ovation in the hall, as well as cheers, clapping and shouts in the media room and among campaigners in the other halls.

French president Francois Hollande (left) shakes hands with United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-moon (centre) after a statement at the COP21 Climate Conference in Le Bourget, north of Paris, on Saturday. Photograph: AFP
French president Francois Hollande (left) shakes hands with United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-moon (centre) after a statement at the COP21 Climate Conference in Le Bourget, north of Paris, on Saturday. Photograph: AFP

The deal is the world’s first comprehensive climate agreement, and is intended to see all countries taking action to tackle the problem.

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Eerlier, amid thunderous applause and an atmosphere charged with emotion, French president Francois Hollande and his foreign minister Laurent Fabius - the conference president - called on delegates at the COP21 climate summit to adopt a historic agreement to tackle climate change.

“You are the world,” Mr Hollande told ministers and negotiators representing 195 countries at the summit in Le Bourget, just north of Paris. “We are at a decisive moment in time,” he said. “There is only one relevant question: Do we want an agreement.”

The final draft of the deal had just been circulated after long hours of negotiations, and it was presented to the conference by France on a “take it or leave it basis”.

Mr Hollande described the draft as “ambitious, but realistic”, saying it “reconciles responsibilities, especially of richer countries [for climate change] and also gives the most vulnerable countries the means they have been promised [to adapt to the impacts of global warming].”

Reminding the packed plenary session that it was “almost exactly a month since Paris was attacked” on November 13th, the French president said “the 12th of December will go down as a major date in the history of mankind”.

“We are in the home stretch. There will be no putting it off. A decisive agreement is here and now,” Mr Hollande declared, saying that delegates were “attached to this beautiful idea that the international community can act [and] what brings us together is the planet itself.”

He paid a warm tribute to Mr Fabius, who is widely credited with having steered the tough negotiations over the past two weeks in a transparent manner that helped to build trust among the parties and ultimately produced a draft of an agreement in Paris that they could all endorse.

The French foreign minister, who held his hand on his heart and looked quite emotional as he stood up to acknowledge a standing ovation, said he wanted the deal to be “as good as possible”, describing it as “ambitious, fair, balanced, dynamic and legally binding” - at least in part.

Mr Fabius noted that the final draft acknowledged the notion of climate justice and differentiation between developed and developing countries, with the objective to have mean temperature well below 2 degrees Celsius “and to limit that to 1.5 degrees” - a line that won widespread applause.

“The time has come to focus not on red lines, but on green lines for universal commitment,” he declared. “Quite clearly, this text - our text - is the best possible balance. It is powerful, yet delicate, and you can go back home with heads held high, having achieved something important.”

Describing it as a “historic turning point” after 20 years of UN climate negotiations, he said: “Our responsibility to history is immense. Nobody here wants a repetition of what happened in Copenhagen [IN 2009]. The very credibility of multilateralism is what is at stake.”

But unlike the Copenhagen disaster, he felt that “today, the planets are aligned” for an agreement to be reached. Ending his speech by quoting the words of Nelson Mandela that “it always seems impossible until it’s done”, he said: “The world is holding its breath. It’s counting on all of us.”

Calling on delegates not to let a quest for perfection to become “an enemy of the public good”, UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said they had to “act as science dictates and protect the planet that sustains us”, adding that the deal “promises to set the world on a new path to a climate-resilient future”.

Additional reporting: PA

Frank McDonald

Frank McDonald

Frank McDonald, a contributor to The Irish Times, is the newspaper's former environment editor