Special Report: Fight against Global
Warming
by Yang Qingchuan
HONOLULU, United States, Jan. 31 (Xinhua) --
Representatives from the United Nations, the European Union as well as 16 major
economies are attending a two-day closed-door conference in Honolulu, Hawaii,
known as the Major Economics Meeting on Energy Security and Climate Change.
The conference is aimed at building on guidelines
forged last month at a United Nations summit in Bali, Indonesia, for concluding
a treaty by the end of 2009 on cutting global greenhouse gas emissions.
The following are some major concepts related to the
meeting and the global issue of climate change.
CLIMATE CHANGE
Climate refers to the average weather experienced
over a long period. This includes temperature, wind and rainfall patterns. The
climate of the Earth is not static, and has changed many times in response to a
variety of natural causes.
The earth has warmed by 0.74 Celsius over the last
hundred years. Around 0.4 Celsius of this warming has occurred since the 1970s.
The recent Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change shows that human activity is the
primary driver of the observed changes in climate.
The main human influence on global climate is emissions of the key greenhouse
gases -- carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide. The accumulation of these
gases in the atmosphere strengthens the greenhouse effect.
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
Greenhouse gases are components of the atmosphere
that contribute to the greenhouse effect. Without the greenhouse effect the
Earth would be uninhabitable.
Greenhouse gases include in the order of relative
abundance water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone.
Greenhouse gases come from natural sources and human activity.
Measurement from Antarctic ice cores show that just
before industrial emissions started, atmospheric CO2 levels were about 280 parts
per million by volume (ppm).
Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the
concentrations of many of the greenhouse gases have increased. The concentration
of CO2 has increased by about 100 ppm to 380 ppm). The first 50 ppm increase
took place in about 200 years, from the start of the Industrial Revolution to
around 1973; the next 50 ppm increase took place in about 33 years, from 1973 to
2006.
UN FRAMEWORK
Also known as the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC or FCCC), it is an international environmental treaty
produced at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
(UNCED), informally known as the Earth Summit, held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992.
The treaty is aimed at reducing emissions of greenhouse gases in order to combat
global warming.
The treaty as originally framed set no mandatory
limits on greenhouse gas emissions for individual nations and contained no
enforcement provisions; it is therefore considered legally non-binding.
Rather, the treaty included provisions for updates
(called "protocols") that would set mandatory emission limits. The principal
update is the Kyoto Protocol, which has become much better known than the UNFCCC
itself.
One of its first achievements was to establish a
national greenhouse gas inventory, as a count of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions
and removals. Accounts must be regularly submitted by signatories of the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
The UNFCCC is also the name of the United Nations
Secretariat charged with supporting the operation of the Convention, with
offices in Haus Carstanjen, Bonn, Germany. Since 2006 the head of the
secretariat has been Yvo de Boer.
THE KYOTO PROTOCOL
It is a protocol to the international Framework
Convention on Climate Change with the objective of reducing Greenhouse gases
that cause climate change. It was agreed on 11 December 1997 at the 3rd
Conference of the Parties to the treaty when they met in Kyoto, and entered into
force on 16 February 2005.
As of November 2007, 174 parties have ratified the
protocol, under which 36 industrialized countries and the European community
have been committed to reducing their emissions by an average of 5percent
against 1990 levels over the five-year period 2008-2012.
The United States is the only industrialized nation
which stays out of the protocol.
The three Kyoto mechanisms are: Emissions Trading
known as "the carbon market," the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Joint
Implementation (JI). The carbon market spawned by these mechanisms is a key tool
in reducing emissions worldwide. It was worth 30 billion U.S. dollars in 2006
and is set to increase.
BALI ROADMAP
After the 2007 United Nations Climate Change
Conference on the island Bali in Indonesia in December, 2007, the participating
nations adopted the Bali roadmap as a two-year process toward finalizing a
binding agreement in 2009 in Denmark, which will replace the Kyoto protocol when
it expires in 2012.
Work on the Bali roadmap will begin as soon as possible. Four major UNFCCC meetings to implement the Bali Roadmap are planned for 2008, with the first to be held in either March or April and the second in June, with the third in either August or September followed by a major meeting in Poznan, Poland in December 2008. The negotiations process is scheduled to conclude in 2009 at a major summit in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Major Economies Meeting (MEM)
Known as the "Major economies meeting on energy security and climate change", the process was initiated by U.S. President Goerge W. Bush in May 2007, when the United States was under growing pressure to contribute more to solving the problem of greenhouse-gas emissions.
Although the Bush administration has repeatedly said the MEM is simply to supplement the U.N. process, there are suspicions that it is intended to sidetrack the U.N. climate talks and push forward its own agenda on the issue, which the U.S. government denies.
It said the meeting is aimed to advance the U.N. agenda and feed new ideas to climate change negotiation process under the U.N. framework and serve as a "subcommittee" to the UN framework.
First MEM was held in Washington last September and the Hawaii meeting is the second in the series.