1. Comply with the provisions of the Paris Agreement to
enhance greenhouse gas mitigation and gradually phase out
the use of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) (which have high
global-warming potential) pursuant to the Kigali Amendment
to the Montreal Protocol.
2. Acknowledge that transparency, environmental co-benefits
and Cost effectiveness should be considered in both policy
formulation and implementation of mitigation and adaptation
issues.
3. Implement a cap-and-trade scheme for greenhouse gases and
taxation to put carbon pricing and green finance into
practice and enhance economic incentives, reduce greenhouse
gas emissions, assist green industrial development, improve
national competitiveness, and promote social welfare.
4. Comply with the objective of a nuclear-free homeland,
such that expansion in nuclear power will not be adopted as
a means of combating climate change.
5. Take mitigation and adaptation strategies into
consideration while performing environmental impact
assessments.
6. Enhance capacities with regard to basic science, early
warning, adaptive response to climate change, and resilience
development.
7. Improve energy and resource utilization efficiency, boost
resource recycling, and ensure national energy security and
sustainable utilization of resources.
8. Establish a communication platform on which to build
partnerships between the central and local governments, as
well as cooperation between public and private sectors, to
practically execute localized adaptation and mitigation
measures.
9. Boost international cooperation and authentic
participation, based on the principle of reciprocity, to
maintain industries’ international competitiveness.
10. Increase public awareness and build the capacity to
respond to climate change, and proactively assist
non-governmental organizations to participate in relevant
events.