Saturday, June 25, 2011

Kyoto Protocol

 
The Kyoto Protocol is an international agreement linked to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The major feature of the Kyoto Protocol is that it sets binding targets for 37 industrialized countries and the European community for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions .These amount to an average of five per cent against 1990 levels over the five-year period 2008-2012.
The major distinction between the Protocol and the Convention is that while the Convention encouraged industrialised countries to stabilize GHG emissions, the Protocol commits them to do so.
Recognizing that developed countries are principally responsible for the current high levels of GHG emissions in the atmosphere as a result of more than 150 years of industrial activity, the Protocol places a heavier burden on developed nations under the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities.”
The Kyoto Protocol was adopted in Kyoto, Japan, on 11 December 1997 and entered into force on 16 February 2005. The detailed rules for the implementation of the Protocol were adopted at COP 7 in Marrakesh in 2001, and are called the “Marrakesh Accords.”
The Kyoto mechanisms
Under the Treaty, countries must meet their targets primarily through national measures. However, the Kyoto Protocol offers them an 
additional means of meeting their targets by way of three 
market-based mechanisms
Learn more of the treaty, which just last year 
was proven to have been collusion  and a hoax,
on the part of certain global foundations
[receiving government contracts, UN contracts, and global grants] 
and certain major institutions (IMF, CHASE, DEPT.of EDUCATION, 
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT for the ARTS and  others
to distort climate change data over the last 2+ decades in order to fund private this hoax.  This site and some searching at www.StartPage.com should explain
    here.................


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