Segolene Royal confirmed as new president of UN climate talks

BusinessGreen staff
clock • 2 min read

French Environment Minister to oversee ratification of Paris Agreement, after taking up role vacated by Laurent Fabius

French Environment Minister Segolene Royal has confirmed she is to take over the presidency of the UN climate talks, following the resignation earlier this week of former foreign minister Laurent Fabius.

According to Reuters' reports, Royal told iTele television she had accepted an invitation from French President Francois Hollande to take up the position as President of the COP21 talks, which run until the COP22 summit kicks off in Marrakech in November.

Royal, who has been close to the long-running UN negotiations for several years, will now be tasked with steering the historic Paris Agreement through to ratification.

The agreement is expected to be formally adopted at a signing ceremony in New York in April. It will become officially ratified once at least 55 countries, representing at least 55 per cent of the world's climate emissions, to ratify the treaty.

Royal told iTele she would Royal work to ensure all countries "ratify the agreement, sign this agreement, implement the decisions in their domestic policies to permit a fight against global warming".

Royal will replace Fabius after he last week stepped down as Foreign Minister to take a new position as head of France's constitutional court. He originally intended to continue as president of the UN talks, but resigned this week in response to concerns holding the two positions may lead to a conflict of interest.

Hopes of the Paris Agreement securing early ratification were boosted this week when US climate envoy Todd Stern confirmed President Obama intended to sign the treaty in April, despite the controversial Supreme Court decision to "stay" the administration's Clean Power Plan while legal action against it proceeds.

"We think we are going to prevail in the court but we are going to go ahead and sign the agreement this year - period," he told reporters. "And we are not in any way going to back away from our 2025 targets."

This article is part of BusinessGreen's Road to Paris hub, hosted in association with PwC.

More on Policy

Beyond borders: applying international innovation to UK sustainability challenges

Beyond borders: applying international innovation to UK sustainability challenges

Partner Insight: The UK has made impressive strides in embedding sustainability into the built environment. But as we face mounting climate and social challenges, it’s time to ask: what can we learn from our peers around the world?

Amelle Mestari, Equans UK & Ireland
clock 13 June 2025 • 6 min read
Acorn CCS project secures £200m in government backing

Acorn CCS project secures £200m in government backing

Firms behind carbon capture and storage project welcome £200m of initial development funding, but concerns grow over future of public sector energy efficiency funding

Michael Holder
clock 12 June 2025 • 5 min read
Spending Review: All the top green commitments at a glance

Spending Review: All the top green commitments at a glance

BusinessGreen rounds up all the key spending announcements today from the Treasury in support of clean energy, low carbon industry, sustainable transport, and nature-friendly farming

Michael Holder
clock 11 June 2025 • 8 min read