Kyoto Protocol

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Kyoto Protocol is "an international agreement setting targets for industrialised countries to cut their greenhouse gas emissions" which are "considered at least partly responsible for global warming - the rise in global temperature which may have catastrophic consequences for life on Earth." [1]

The Protocol was "agreed in 1997 based on principles set out in a framework convention signed in 1992." [2]

"Industrialised countries have committed to cut their combined emissions to 5% below 1990 levels by 2008 - 2012. ... Each country that signed the protocol agreed to its own specific target. EU countries are expected to cut their present emissions by 8% and Japan by 5%. Some countries with low emissions were permitted to increase them." [3]

President George W. Bush "pulled out of the Kyoto Protocol in 2001, saying implementing it would gravely damage the US economy." The Bush administration "dubbed the treaty 'fatally flawed', partly because it does not require developing countries to commit to emissions reductions," which includes China and India, "although they are two of the world's biggest producers of greenhouse gases." [4]

Documents

Forthcoming Negotiating Meetings on the UNFCCC

Related SourceWatch Resources

External links

Resources

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