Poland has been officially named the host of the next round of UN climate talks in 2013.
The decision was adopted by negotiators from over 190
countries who gathered two weeks ago in the capital of Qatar, Doha, for
the current round of talks.
Deeply divided on funding for poor countries and the fate of unused
carbon emission permits, the participants of the Doha conference failed
to yield a global climate pact to curb emissions of greenhouse gases.
Poland, which heavily relies on coal production, was chosen on the
basis of geographical rotation as next year marks the turn of East
European countries to host the annual event.
The country has been struggling to sell its unused emission quotas as
there are only a few potential buyers and developing countries want the
emission permits scrapped altogether.
The Kyoto Protocol, an
international treaty linked to the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC), was first negotiated in 1997 with the goal
of reducing global greenhouse gas emissions.
After last year’s Climate Change Conference in Durban, 35 Kyoto
Protocol member states agreed to adopt a universal legal treaty on
climate change by 2015 after the initial agreement expires in 2012.
The United States has never joined the Kyoto Protocol, while Japan,
New Zealand, Canada and Russia have already announced they will not be
signing up to a new interim commitment to the treaty.
As a result, the extension would only cover about 15% of the world's emissions of greenhouse gases.
No comments:
Post a Comment