New UN Climate Chief Faces a Big Agenda

EDITOR’S NOTE: Christiana Figueres lands huge tasks when she succeeds Yvo de Boer as chief of the United Nations climate secretariat, according to Jan von der Goltz, senior associate at the Center for Global Development. These include working with next summit host, Mexico, to revive the negotiation process, ensuring progress in delivering commitments made at Copenhagen, and secure agreement on less controversial climate change-related issues. 

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon yesterday appointed  Christiana Figueres  (currently a senior climate negotiator for Costa Rica), to replace Yvo de Boer at the helm of the UN’s climate secretariat (UNFCCC).

It is a hopeful sign that the UN has settled on a policy maker from Costa Rica, a country that has received accolades for its ambitious plan to become carbon-neutral by 2021.

Ms. Figueres certainly has her work cut out for her. Christiana FigueresThe Copenhagen conference failed to agree ambitious climate action, and the negotiations remain bogged down. At the same time, action to limit climate change – and an international agreement to bolster it – is more urgent than ever. If any reminder was needed, NASA recently announced that the first four months of 2010 have been the hottest, globally, in the 131-year record. The negotiations are, of course, country-driven, and the influence of the UNFCCC chief is limited. Yet, UNFCCC acts as Secretariat, is a key facilitator, and provides the umbrella structure for different funding mechanisms.

Here are some issues on which Ms. Figueres’s leadership will matter:

Re-published with permission by the Center for Global Development. Visit the original article.