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Prime Minister Juha Sipilä: European Union must take climate leadership role

Government Communications Department
Publication date 4.6.2017 10.19 | Published in English on 5.6.2017 at 14.42
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First published in Kaleva 4th of June 2017

The effects of climate change are already evident. Climate change is real here in northern latitudes in particular. The Arctic region is warming more quickly than the rest of the world. For humanity, climate change is catastrophic and will determine our destiny: the conditions for life will become less favourable, humanitarian distress will grow and migration will increase.

The Paris Agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was a historic achievement and the result of a huge global effort. The Paris Agreement officially entered into force in November last year. The decision announced by the President of the United States of America on Thursday evening, stating that the US will withdraw from the Paris Agreement, is an enormous disappointment and a blow to the country’s international reputation and its role in terms of responsibility for the future of humankind and the climate. This decision puts the United States into the same camp as Syria and Nicaragua, which similarly have placed themselves outside the Paris Agreement. The US withdrawal will not derail the Paris Agreement as such, but it is of course a major disappointment to all concerned. For the signatory countries the work will continue more vigorously than before.

The Paris Agreement is, by nature, flexible. If it had wished to do so, the US administration could have remained within the agreement and still have pursued the national energy and climate policies advocated by President Donald Trump. The US withdrawal will not in itself wreck cooperation on climate issues. Nevertheless, the impact of this detachment should under no circumstances be underestimated. It increases uncertainty over the direction of international climate policy and will slow the implementation of emission reductions at least in the United States. It will also create spillover effects across the world.

Headed by Minister of the Environment Kimmo Tiilikainen, the Finnish negotiators were active in the talks leading to the Paris Agreement. We worked extremely hard to achieve a climate agreement. Finland will continue with this same sustainable and responsible approach. Within the European Union, the Nordic countries represent an ideal grouping in which we can work together.  As soon as it was rumoured that the United States would withdraw, I was in touch with my Nordic colleagues. The outcome of our discussions was that we agreed to stand firm together and to present a joint appeal to the US President. Besides electronic channels we also sent our shared communication on the Paris Agreement by letter to President Trump.

It is abundantly clear that the European Union must now take on the climate leadership role. The Nordic countries will play a major part in this. The European Union must also deepen its cooperation with China. China will be looking for a friend to fill the gap left by the United States. The messages from China in this regard have been positive. The dialogue was also strengthened by the EU-China Summit this week, which focuses on the issue at hand and on closer relations and more effective joint climate action.

The climate goals of Finland and the Nordic countries are ambitious. By current estimates, Finland will be carbon neutral in 2045. Sweden has the same goal. The measures we have planned will take us to that historic point. We are among the leading countries in Europe that are showing the way, demonstrating that practical steps can take us from a fossil-fuel economy to a bioeconomy. The Government's Energy and Climate Strategy sets out excellent check marks for this.

The meeting of Nordic prime ministers in Bergen at the start of the week focused strongly on climate issues. We considered what we can do together more effectively regarding biofuels, bioenergy and renewable energy, and for advancing progress with the United Nations’ Agenda 2030 sustainable development goals. I would also invite us in Finland to think whether we could even set more ambitious goals for ourselves.

Combating climate change is of course something that can be done through other means than political decisions. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is not only essential but also represents a business opportunity. Implementing emission reduction measures in different parts of the world and pricing coal at the right level will create demand on an equitable basis for new solutions, including renewable energy. This will also mean greater competitiveness for export companies in countries with ambitious climate policies.

Now it is most important that all countries that are committed to the Paris Agreement stick to their own emission reduction targets and focus on finalising the rules of the Paris Agreement by 2018.

Finland and the Nordic countries are acting as examples in this work. Finland’s climate strategy is ambitious, and we can use it to show the way for the rest of the world. We should act responsibly towards our planet and its future, and we owe this to future generations. Together we can succeed in this.

Juha Sipilä

Prime Minister, Chairman of the Centre Party