Posts Tagged ‘Kyoto protocol’

Canada Leaving Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

In announcing the decision, government officials indicated that the possibility of huge fines for Canada’s failure to meet greenhouse gas emissions targets had played a role.

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Canada Leaving Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change

Canada pulls out of Kyoto accord

Monday, December 12th, 2011

Canada will formally withdraw from the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, the first nation to pull out of the treaty, the environment minister has said.

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Canada pulls out of Kyoto accord

Deal Reached at Climate Conference

Sunday, December 11th, 2011

To extend Kyoto Protocol five more years.

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Deal Reached at Climate Conference

Canada makes Kyoto climate strike

Monday, November 28th, 2011

Canada confirms it will not make new emission cuts under the Kyoto Protocol and may formally withdraw from the treaty, adding new troubles for the UN climate summit.

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Canada makes Kyoto climate strike

As U.N. climate talks get underway in South Africa, local strategies are replacing the Kyoto global pact

Monday, November 28th, 2011

The officials from around the world who will gather in South Africa on Monday to convene the latest round of U.N. climate negotiations are facing an uncomfortable fact: The global pact that has dictated greenhouse-gas targets since 1997 may no longer be relevant. The mandatory targets of the Kyoto Protocol cover less than a third of the world’s carbon output. Major emitters are not bound by it. And, increasingly, the world is relying on a patchwork of measures rather than a universal treaty to lessen the impacts of global warming. Read full article > >

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As U.N. climate talks get underway in South Africa, local strategies are replacing the Kyoto global pact

Spotlight Cancún: Kyoto Protocol Post Mortem

Friday, December 10th, 2010

This week the world stands by as international negotiators in Cancun appear to be writing the post mortem for the Kyoto Protocol. It seems likely that an alternative track first proposed in Copenhagen – the Copenhagen Accord – will replace the top-down U.N. centered approach to climate change that has characterized international climate negotiations since the early 1990s. Many view the Copenhagen Accord as a major set-back to global efforts to stabilize the climate system. read more

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Spotlight Cancún: Kyoto Protocol Post Mortem

Rumors and Pessimism Reign Midway Through Cancun Summit

Sunday, December 5th, 2010

Cancun, Mexico – At the end of the first week of climate negotiations under way in this Mexican Caribbean resort city, it seems a distant possibility that the nearly 200 national delegations will agree on renewing the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012. Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), acknowledged Friday that the threat of failure appears to be gathering force each day at the 16th Conference of Parties (COP 16) to the convention, Nov. 29 to Dec. 10. read more

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Rumors and Pessimism Reign Midway Through Cancun Summit

Cancun Protesters Target Canada, US Over Oil Sands Pipelines

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

Cancun, Mexico – North American native groups urged the United States and Canada to abandon support for carbon-heavy oil sands in one of the first visible protests at the UN climate talks in Cancun. They regard the booming oil sands industry in Alberta as the main reason for Canada’s reluctance to embrace stronger greenhouse gas reduction targets and its failure to meet its Kyoto commitments. The U.S. is the largest purchaser of the Canadian crude. read more

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Cancun Protesters Target Canada, US Over Oil Sands Pipelines

A Novel Tactic in Climate Fight Gains Some Traction

Monday, November 8th, 2010

Some policy experts are trying to use a highly successful international treaty that was ratified more than 20 years ago as a tool to curb climate change.

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A Novel Tactic in Climate Fight Gains Some Traction

China and US blamed as climate talks stall

Saturday, October 9th, 2010

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “China and US blamed as climate talks stall” was written by Jonathan Watts in Tianjin, for guardian.co.uk on Friday 8th October 2010 11.16 UTC

China and the US were today accused of holding back progress on a climate deal as talks in Tianjin crashed into a series of procedural roadblocks.

On the penultimate day, negotiators said they have moved forward on technical issues, including a finance package and the subject of technology transfer, but the goal of a deal to replace or extend the Kyoto protocol remained a distant prospect.

The world’s two biggest polluters, which together account for more than 40% of global emissions, have clashed this week over the form an agreement should take, the timing of next steps and how to enshrine and verify emissions targets.

The United States wants to move forward from the Copenhagen accord agreement made last December by coordinating national commitments to reduce emissions and instituting a rigorous regime to ensure compliance.

China is keen to protect a two-track approach in which richer countries make the first and biggest moves to reflect their greater responsibility for climate change.

It wants the US and signatories to the existing Kyoto protocol to lock in their commitments to reduce emissions and resists demands that China’s own actions are simultaneously incorporated in the framework of an international treaty.

These tough stances have exasperated many participants, though which of the powers they blamed depended on their political alignments.

“I’m disappointed at the attitude of China. It’s stepping back more and more from what we achieved at Copenhagen [the climate summit last December],” said Akira Yamada, a climate negotiator for Japan. “It’s as if they are trying to trash the Copenhagen accord.”

“I don’t see progress towards a substantial result in Cancún, but we are still trying,” said Branca Americano, the Brazilian state secretary for the environment. “Europe is willing to push the process. I’d like to see the United States move, but I don’t see it.”

Europe, the least developed nations, island states and some of the big emerging economies – including Brazil and South Africa – have expressed a willingness to compromise over the legal form of the agreement and the means of verification for emissions cuts.

The disagreements increase the likelihood of a gap in the global climate regime after 2012, when the Kyoto protocol needs to be renewed.

Japan says it will not sign a second commitment period because it will be ineffective without simultaneous actions by non-signatories.

“The Kyoto protocol parties emit only 28% of global emissions now and will be less and less in the future. It cannot be effective unless the world’s first and second biggest emitter are involved,” Yamada said.

Europe said it will sign up to Kyoto if nations outside that treaty work in tandem to legalise their commitments by the time of a climate meeting in South Africa next year. Eventually, it wants the two tracks to merge.

This week’s discussions have brought that no nearer to realisation.

China accused its counterparts of trying to kill the Kyoto protocol. “We are losing confidence and trust,” Huang Huikang, China’s recently appointed special representative for climate change negotiations, told a plenary stock-taking session. “I want to emphasise on our side no compromise on the two track process and no compromise on the interests of developing countries.”

Poorer nations and small island states, which are feeling the brunt of the impact of climate change, expressed dismay at the negative actions of the big emitters.

“We call on major powers to come to the table in a more urgent and efficient manner,” said Dessima Williams, chair of the Alliance of Small Island States.

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