 Today we explain three main goals of the Paris Agreement. On 12th of December 2015, the representatives of 196 countries met in Paris and finalized the climate agreement within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Paris Agreement became the first global deal to address the climate change problem and strengthen the international response to mitigate global warming by lowering emissions. Each country is responsible for contributing to the Paris Agreement's goals, and each country's commitments should be more ambitious every five years. The agreement outlines non-binding, political-environmental measurements suggested by each member state and has three goals. First is a long-term goal of keeping the increase in warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, but achieving below 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels would be even better. The second goal relates to the need to expand adaptation capacity to the adverse effects of climate change and promote the development of climate resilience and low greenhouse gas emissions. Lastly, the finance flow should be consistent with the objectives stated in the Paris Agreement. For the first time, all nations are brought together for a common cause to undertake the ambitious goals of the Paris Agreement, and battle climate change to adapt to its effects. The agreement outlines new answer to global climate effort.