Climate-diligent cities: Aligning mitigation ambitions with the Paris Agreement

Bridging policy and science, the closed-door event will aim to boost a fruitful dialogue between key speakers from city networks, city governments, academia, specialist partners, and a selected expert audience. Following an introductory brief presentation and supported by keynote interventions, the seminar will first survey how cities are contributing to the current (state-based) international climate regime and then delve into the preliminary characteristics of an urban climate standard of diligence.

Localització:

CIDOB, sala Jordi Maragall, Elisabets, 12, 08001 Barcelona

Organitzat per:

CIDOB’s Global Cities Programme, in collaboration with C40 Cities and with the support of Barcelona City Council

At the current rate, by 2030 the planet will have exhausted the remaining carbon budget of 500 GtCO2, determined by the IPCC as the safe threshold to avoid the most critical climate scenarios. In an increasingly urban world, cities play a fundamental role against climate change as they account for 67-72% of the global GHG emissions. 

During the last decades, this evidence has led several cities to adopt climate-sensitive strategies. This is particularly the case of climate-oriented city networks through which local governments amplify urban climate mitigation and seek to contribute to the objectives of the international climate regime. For instance, the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy (GCoM) estimates that the climate mitigation objectives adopted by their signatories will reduce global emissions by 4.1 GtCO2eq by 2050. Likewise, C40 Cities aim to halve their collective emissions by 2030. ICLEI has joined forces with Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) and created the world’s leading city climate reporting platform

Indeed, in overall terms, city governments have demonstrated to be more ambitious than their national counterparts in terms of GHG emission reduction goals. But is this enough to fulfill the urgent measures needed to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 °C as the Paris Agreement pledges? The truth is that there are several tools to monitor the mitigation strategies of nation-states and to determine their fair share. However, we lack information and instruments to assess whether a city is doing enough to combat global warming, making it harder for citizens to hold their governments accountable. 

In this context, we advocate for the notion of climate-diligent cities. A diligent city is one which deploys the adequate means and best feasible efforts to reduce its net emissions. In line with the expectations that the Paris Agreement sets on countries, diligent cities are those whose contribution reflects their highest possible ambition. The notion of climate-diligent cities suggests that cities’ mitigation efforts could leapfrog by adopting the very formal rules underpinning (countries’) international climate regime. This logic underpins the work by C40 Cities to support their members in developing Paris Agreement-compatible climate action plans and adhering to the recommendations of the UN report Integrity Matterson net zero commitments. 

CIDOB’s Global Cities Programme, in collaboration with C40 Cities and with the support of Barcelona City Council, organizes an in-person international seminar in Barcelona to explore this seminal idea and its possible avenues for action. Bridging policy and science, the closed-door event will aim to boost a fruitful dialogue between key speakers from city networks, city governments, academia, specialist partners, and a selected expert audience. Following an introductory brief presentation and supported by keynote interventions, the seminar will first survey how cities are contributing to the current (state-based) international climate regime and then delve into the preliminary characteristics of an urban climate standard of diligence.