Copenhagen's Inconvenient Truth

 How to Salvage the Climate Conference 

Summary -- 

The Copenhagen conference won't solve the problem of climate change once and for all. Rather than aiming for a broad international treaty, negotiators should strengthen existing national policies and seek targeted emissions cuts in both rich nations and the developing world.

MICHAEL A. LEVI is David M. Rubenstein Senior Fellow for Energy and the Environment at the Council on Foreign Relations.

This December, diplomats from nearly 200 countries will gather in Copenhagen to negotiate a successor to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which for the first time bound wealthy countries to specific cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. Most of these emissions come from burning fossil fuels -- coal, oil, and natural gas -- for energy, from deforestation, and from the agricultural sector. They must be cut deeply in the coming decades if the world is to control the risks of dangerous climate change.

Most of those devoted to slashing the world's greenhouse gas emissions have placed enormous weight on the Copenhagen conference. Speaking earlier this year about the conference, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was emphatic: "We must harness the necessary political will to seal the deal on an ambitious new climate agreement in December here in Copenhagen. . . . If we get it wrong we face catastrophic damage to people, to the planet."

Hopes are higher than ever for a breakthrough climate deal. For the past eight years, many argued that developing nations reluctant to commit to a new global climate-change deal -- particularly China and India -- were simply hiding behind the United States, whose enthusiastic engagement was all that was needed for a breakthrough. Now the long-awaited shift in U.S. policy has arrived. The Obama administration is taking ambitious steps to limit carbon dioxide emissions at home, and Congress is considering important cap-and-trade and clean-energy legislation. The road to a global treaty that contains the climate problem now appears to be clear.

But it is not so simple. The odds of signing a comprehensive treaty in December are vanishingly small. And even reaching such a deal the following year would be an extraordinary challenge, given the domestic political constraints in Washington and in other capitals that make such an agreement difficult to negotiate and ratify. The many government officials and activists seeking to solve the climate problem therefore need to fundamentally rethink their strategy and expectations for the Copenhagen conference.

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Posted 1 month ago

a must see movie -The Age of Stupid

"why didn’t we stop climate change when we had the chance?"

pls visit the sites

and declare urself that STUPID or NOT STUPID

" swathi Is too a stupid in climate change"

http://www.notstupid.org/

http://www.ageofstupid.net

"crowd-funding"

the  Age of Stupid  adventure has been funded by ordinary people from all round the world.  228 individuals and groups -  including a hockey team and a women's health centre - invested £450,000 in 2004->2006 via our cunning "crowd-funding" (as  showered in praise by Time magazine) scheme. Then another 25 invested £150,000 for the UK distribution & publicity
in 2008/9 - and a further 384 lovely ones donated £180,294 for the Not Stupid action campaign. Now we're raising a final £180,000 for the Global Premiere on 21st / 22nd September - the film will beam live by satellite from a solar cinema tent in Central Park to 45 countries.  We may even beat Star Wars to the "biggest ever premiere" record.
Please help by either investing (in which case you might get some money back in the future) or donating (in which case you definitely won't). Either way you'll be making a positive contribution to fighting climate change in the last few months we have left to prevent catastrophe. 

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Filed under  //  climate change   Crowdsourcing   flim  
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Posted 2 months ago