These provisions send a clear signal to countries. While there is some flexibility for governments to define climate change policies based on their priorities and development capabilities, the overall trajectory of emissions would require that all increase their ambitions over time and eventually offset their emissions and distances. In other words, the direction of travel defined by the Paris Agreement foresees a future in which the atmosphere does not see additional greenhouse gas emissions and, therefore, all countries must work in this direction. In this context, long-term strategies are becoming an essential tool in the fight against climate change. The Paris Agreement was drafted in 2015 to strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change. To create the level of political will needed, we need an accelerated change in climate change standards around the world; an increasingly internalized belief in public opinion, in the private sector, in markets, among political leaders, that we must make this change on a large scale and quickly; that our future really depends on it; that it is no longer acceptable to briefly reduce climate change. Climate change is an urgent threat that requires decisive action. Communities around the world are already feeling more and more of an impact on the climate, from droughts to floods to rising seas. The Global Risk Report of the World Economic Forum remains at the top of the list. Others say the U.S. withdrawal is due in part to the Obama administration`s inability to have the U.S. Senate ratify the Paris agreement.

Over the past three years, U.S. negotiators have participated in UN climate talks, while the government has attempted to use these events to promote fossil fuels. Although both the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement intend to combat climate change, there are significant differences between them. “The ue-Green agreement and the commitments of China, Japan and South Korea on CO2 emissions neutrality indicate the inevitability of our collective transition from fossil fuels,” said Laurence Tubiana, one of the architects of the Paris Agreement and now executive director of the European Climate Foundation. 1 Article 2 also stipulates that such a level should be achieved within sufficient time to naturally adapt ecosystems to climate change, ensure that food production is not threatened and to enable sustainable economic development. The historic Paris Agreement has now entered into force. For the first time, countries around the world have pledged to tackle climate change together. An action plan for climate finance has been adopted to need assistance, especially for countries that are most dependent on the effects of climate change.