The world has taken an important step on the road to
drastically reduce the production and consumption of powerful greenhouse gasses
known as hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) and limit global warming, with the Kigali
Amendment to the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer
coming into force on 1st January 2019.
If fully supported by governments, the private sector and
citizens, the Kigali Amendment will avoid up to 0.4°C of global warming this
century while continuing to protect the ozone layer. The amendment will
substantively contribute to the goals of the Paris Agreement.
HFCs are organic compounds frequently used as refrigerants
in air conditioners and other devices as alternatives to ozone-depleting
substances controlled under the Montreal Protocol.
While HFCs themselves
do not deplete the ozone layer, they are extremely potent greenhouse gases with
global warming potentials that can be many times higher than carbon dioxide.
The parties to the amendment have put in place practical
arrangements for its implementation, including agreements on technologies for
the destruction of HFCs and new data reporting requirements and tools.
The amendment comes
with provisions for capacity-building for developing countries, institutional
strengthening and the development of national strategies to reduce HFCs and
replace them with alternatives. Phasing down HFCs under the Kigali Amendment
may also open a window to redesign cooling equipment that is more energy
efficient, further increasing the climate gains.
Implementation of new targets set out in the amendment will
be done in three phases, with a group of developed countries starting HFCs
phase-down from 2019. Developing countries will follow with a freeze of HFCs
consumption levels in 2024 and with a few countries freezing consumption in
2028.
Ratified by 65 countries so far, the Kigali Amendment builds
on the historic legacy of the Montreal Protocol agreed in 1987. The Protocol
and its previous amendments, which require the phasing out of the production
and consumption of substances that cause ozone depletion, have been universally
ratified by 197 parties.
The broad support for and implementation of the Montreal
Protocol has led to the phase-out of more than 99 per cent of nearly 100
ozone-depleting chemicals and significantly contributed to climate change
mitigation.
Evidence presented in the latest Scientific Assessment of
Ozone Depletion shows that the ozone layer in parts of the stratosphere has
recovered at a rate of 1-3% per decade since 2000. At projected rates, Northern
Hemisphere and mid-latitude ozone is scheduled to heal completely by the 2030s followed
by the Southern Hemisphere in the 2050s and Polar Regions by 2060.
To date 65
countries have already ratified the amendment, with more expected in the weeks
to come.
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