Kyoto Treaty on Global Climate
During a United Nations' conference of parties on December of 1997 in Kyoto Japan, the United Nations had a convention on climate change. In the convention the United Nations proposed a solution to the threat of climate change leading into an arrangement known as the Kyoto Treaty or Protocol on Global Climate Change. The Kyoto Treaty or Protocols aim is to combat the global warming by limiting emission Greenhouse gasses, Carbon dioxide CO2, Methane, Sox nitrous oxide NoX, hydorflourocarbon, perflourocarbon, and sulfur hexafluoride to 5-7% below the 1990 levels, the UN hopes to reach this aim during the period of 2008-2010. The Kyoto treaty or protocol is an extension of the Montreal Protocol which is a landmark international agreement designed to protect the stratospheric ozone layer. The treaty was originally signed in 1987 and substantially amended in 1990 and 1992. The Montreal Protocol requires that the production and consumption of compounds that eat up the ozone layer in the atmosphere chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), halons, carbon tetrachloride, and methyl chloroform are to be regulated out by 2000. So far about 168 nations have signed the treaty including 130 developed nations but not China nor India.
In recent years we have experienced the El Nino and La Nina phenomena. 5% of these green house gasses by the year of 2012; it allows business to voluntarily decide whether they want to participate and finally urge businesses to reduce emission by giving tax incentives to those that invest on a cleaner environment. These and other developing countries that are experiencing rapid growth face challenges in reducing their emissions without harming their economies. By these pieces breaking off, Antarctica would indirectly produce the sea level to rise when this ice melts. For example with a higher sea level there is also more water to be evaporated, this means that there will be more rain and this can cause problems in some regions. The United States government under Bush' administration is trying to kill the Kyoto treaty. If we really want to make a difference in current ecological events we have to work on preserving our earth unitedly. Another reason I think the United States should sign this treaty is because most Americans would like it. By not signing this treaty the US fails its duties toward the people, because it is not protecting our live by endangering us of environmental problems, not only to the American people but for entire humankind. The United States fail to see that by reducing 5. its causes: "these gasses, supporters say, are the main contributors to global warming that, if unchecked, will lead to such dire results as more severe flooding, catastrophic raises in sea level and the northern shift of agricultural production. We as a society should become more conserved on our supplies. Yet China was entirely exempted from the requirements [. And I think every country should sign and achieve this treaty.
Common topics in this essay:
European Union,
Ozone Layer,
Antarctic Peninsula,
La Nina,
Treaty Americans,
China China,
George Bush,
Montreal Protocol,
United States',
United Prices,
kyoto treaty,
climate change,
global warming,
treaty protocol,
international treaty,
sea level,
greenhouse gasses,
kyoto treaty protocol,
global climate change,
global climate,
green house,
ozone layer,
|