Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands

In December 2015, a historic new global climate agreement was adopted in Paris and, so far, 194 countries have signed the agreement and 117 countries have ratified. Earlier, in September 2015, the UN General Assembly agreed on the Sustainable Development Goals. At the meeting of the Senior Arctic Of...

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Main Author: CAFF
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: CAFF 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11374/3200
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spelling ftarcticcouncil:oai:oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/3200 2024-01-14T10:03:46+01:00 Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands CAFF 2017 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11374/3200 en eng CAFF https://hdl.handle.net/11374/3200 Technical Report 2017 ftarcticcouncil 2023-12-21T00:08:57Z In December 2015, a historic new global climate agreement was adopted in Paris and, so far, 194 countries have signed the agreement and 117 countries have ratified. Earlier, in September 2015, the UN General Assembly agreed on the Sustainable Development Goals. At the meeting of the Senior Arctic Officials in March 2016, the issues of climate change and sustainability were therefore partly raised in a new global context. Climate change has been part of the Arctic Council’s programme of work for many years, but following the level of ambitions in the new UN-agreements, actions have to be taken and all actors, not just national governments, are expected to play a key role in the implementation. Report Arctic Climate change Arctic Council Repository Arctic
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language English
description In December 2015, a historic new global climate agreement was adopted in Paris and, so far, 194 countries have signed the agreement and 117 countries have ratified. Earlier, in September 2015, the UN General Assembly agreed on the Sustainable Development Goals. At the meeting of the Senior Arctic Officials in March 2016, the issues of climate change and sustainability were therefore partly raised in a new global context. Climate change has been part of the Arctic Council’s programme of work for many years, but following the level of ambitions in the new UN-agreements, actions have to be taken and all actors, not just national governments, are expected to play a key role in the implementation.
format Report
author CAFF
spellingShingle CAFF
Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands
author_facet CAFF
author_sort CAFF
title Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands
title_short Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands
title_full Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands
title_fullStr Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands
title_full_unstemmed Scoping for Resilience and Management of Arctic Wetlands
title_sort scoping for resilience and management of arctic wetlands
publisher CAFF
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/11374/3200
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/11374/3200
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