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"The UN Climate Change Conference in Bonn is the next step for governments to implement the
Paris Climate Change Agreement and accelerate the transformation to sustainable, resilient and
climate-safe development. The Paris Agreement entered into force last November and the era of
implementation has begun. This conference will further clarify the enabling frameworks that will make
the agreement fully operational and the support needed for all nations to achieve their climate
change goals. COP 23 – which will be presided over by the Government of Fiji with support by
Germany – is also an excellent example of the cooperation and collaboration between nations
that will truly meet the global climate change challenge. This meeting is incredibly important.
I encourage governments to come to COP 23 ready to work together to accelerate implementation and
take the crucial next steps towards transformative change. I also encourage public and private sector
leaders and every citizen to follow what happens at this year’s conference on our website and
on social media to understand how to take action. To meet the climate change and sustainable
development challenge, everyone must be empowered to contribute. We all have a role to play, and COP
23 will shine a light on both action underway and the many possible actions every individual and
institution can take moving forward."

Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary UNFCCC
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"As President of COP23, I have made a solemn obligation to move the international community to
decisive action to address the underlying causes of global climate change. The Conferences of the
Parties are the vehicles to achieve this, and so we must seize the opportunities that each conference
gives us to review the latest science on climate change, gauge the world’s progress, and agree
on appropriate rules, procedures and mechanisms to confront all of the challenges posed by our
warming planet.
The Paris Agreement calls for concerted action to hold the increase in global average temperature to
less than 2 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial levels. But scientific research is revealing
more about climate change each year, and we now know that change is occurring at a faster rate than
we believed when the Paris Agreement was forged. That means that we must embrace the Paris
Agreement’s more ambitious target of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius and achieving
net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 at the latest.
People in many parts of the world are already living with the first serious consequences of global
warming. For the most vulnerable countries, including small island developing states in the Pacific
and elsewhere, the need for action is real and immediate. We see an urgent need to mobilize
international investment to fund the implementation of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for
vulnerable developing states. And the global community must also must address the need to finance
adaptation and to increase private-sector support for adaptation and mitigation actions, including
insurance. And we must accelerate the
Our meeting in Bonn comes at a time when it is no longer sufficient to maintain the momentum. It is
my intention to make COP23 Fiji in Bonn the occasion when we accelerated the pace of positive change
and acted more boldly than we thought possible.
I call on governments at all levels, NGOs, the scientific community, the business community, labour
organisations and all of civil society to join me in a grand coalition to save our Earth and the
people and other living things that call it home."
H. E. Mr. Frank Bainimarama, Prime Minister of Fiji
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