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United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

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UNFCCC logo.

UNFCCC member countries (green) and observers (orange). Does not include some small island countries for practical purposes

  • UNFCCC Members:
  1. Image:Flag of Afghanistan.svg Afghanistan
  2. Image:Flag of Albania.svg Albania
  3. Image:Flag of Algeria.svg Algeria
  4. Image:Flag of Angola.svg Angola
  5. Image:Flag of Antigua and Barbuda.svg Antigua and Barbuda
  6. Image:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina
  7. Image:Flag of Armenia.svg Armenia
  8. Image:Flag of Australia.svg Australia
  9. Image:Flag of Austria.svg Austria
  10. Image:Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan
  11. Image:Flag of the Bahamas.svg Bahamas
  12. Image:Flag of Bahrain.svg Bahrain
  13. Image:Flag of Bangladesh.svg Bangladesh
  14. Image:Flag of Barbados.svg Barbados
  15. Image:Flag of Belarus.svg Belarus
  16. Image:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium
  17. Image:Flag of Belize.svg Belize
  18. Image:Flag of Benin.svg Benin
  19. Image:Flag of Bhutan.svg Bhutan
  20. Image:Flag of Bolivia.svg Bolivia
  21. Image:Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Bosnia and Herzegovina
  22. Image:Flag of Botswana.svg Botswana
  23. Image:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil
  24. Image:Flag of Bulgaria (bordered).svg Bulgaria
  25. Image:Flag of Burkina Faso.svg Burkina Faso
  26. Image:Flag of Myanmar.svg Myanmar
  27. Image:Flag of Burundi.svg Burundi
  28. Image:Flag of Cambodia.svg Cambodia
  29. Image:Flag of Cameroon.svg Cameroon
  30. Image:Flag of Canada.svg Canada
  31. Image:Flag of Cape Verde.svg Cape Verde
  32. Image:Flag of the Central African Republic.svg Central African Republic
  33. Image:Flag of Chad.svg Chad
  34. Image:Flag of Chile (bordered).svg Chile
  35. Image:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China
  36. Image:Flag of Colombia.svg Colombia
  37. Image:Flag of the Comoros.svg Comoros
  38. Image:Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.svg Democratic Republic of the Congo
  39. Image:Flag of the Republic of the Congo.svg Republic of the Congo
  40. Image:Flag of the Cook Islands.svg Cook Islands
  41. Image:Flag of Costa Rica (state).svg Costa Rica
  42. Image:Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg Côte d'Ivoire
  43. Image:Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia
  44. Image:Flag of Cuba.svg Cuba
  45. Image:Flag of Cyprus.svg Cyprus
  46. Image:Flag of the Czech Republic (bordered).svg Czech Republic
  47. Image:Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark
  48. Image:Flag of Djibouti.svg Djibouti
  49. Image:Flag of Dominica.svg Dominica
  50. Image:Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg Dominican Republic
  51. Image:Flag of Ecuador.svg Ecuador
  52. Image:Flag of Egypt.svg Egypt
  53. Image:Flag of El Salvador.svg El Salvador
  54. Image:Flag of Equatorial Guinea.svg Equatorial Guinea
  55. Image:Flag of Eritrea.svg Eritrea
  56. Image:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia
  57. Image:Flag of Ethiopia.svg Ethiopia
  58. Image:European flag.svg European Union
  59. Image:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji
  60. Image:Flag of Finland (bordered).svg Finland
  61. Image:Flag of France.svg France
  62. Image:Flag of Gabon.svg Gabon
  63. Image:Flag of The Gambia.svg Gambia
  64. Image:Flag of Georgia (bordered).svg Georgia
  65. Image:Flag of Germany.svg Germany
  66. Image:Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana
  67. Image:Flag of Greece.svg Greece
  68. Image:Flag of Grenada.svg Grenada
  69. Image:Flag of Guatemala.svg Guatemala
  70. Image:Flag of Guinea.svg Guinea
  71. Image:Flag of Guinea-Bissau.svg Guinea-Bissau
  72. Image:Flag of Guyana.svg Guyana
  73. Image:Flag of Haiti.svg Haiti
  74. Image:Flag of Honduras.svg Honduras
  75. Image:Flag of Hungary.svg Hungary
  76. Image:Flag of Iceland.svg Iceland
  77. Image:Flag of India.svg India
  78. Image:Flag of Indonesia (bordered).svg Indonesia
  79. Image:Flag of Iran.svg Iran
  80. Image:Flag of Ireland (bordered).svg Ireland
  81. Image:Flag of Israel (bordered).svg Israel
  82. Image:Flag of Italy.svg Italy
  83. Image:Flag of Jamaica.svg Jamaica
  84. Image:Flag of Japan (bordered).svg Japan
  85. Image:Flag of Jordan.svg Jordan
  86. Image:Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Kazakhstan
  87. Image:Flag of Kenya.svg Kenya
  88. Image:Flag of Kiribati.svg Kiribati
  89. Image:Flag of North Korea.svg North Korea
  90. Image:Flag of South Korea (bordered).svg South Korea
  91. Image:Flag of Kuwait.svg Kuwait
  92. Image:Flag of Kyrgyzstan.svg Kyrgyzstan
  93. Image:Flag of Laos.svg Laos
  94. Image:Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia
  95. Image:Flag of Lebanon.svg Lebanon
  96. Image:Flag of Lesotho.svg Lesotho
  97. Image:Flag of Liberia.svg Liberia
  98. Image:Flag of Libya.svg Libya
  99. Image:Flag of Liechtenstein.svg Liechtenstein
  100. Image:Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania
  101. Image:Flag of Luxembourg.svg Luxembourg
  102. Image:Flag of Macedonia.svg Macedonia
  103. Image:Flag of Madagascar (bordered).svg Madagascar
  104. Image:Flag of Malawi.svg Malawi
  105. Image:Flag of Malaysia.svg Malaysia
  106. Image:Flag of Maldives.svg Maldives
  107. Image:Flag of Mali.svg Mali
  108. Image:Flag of Malta (bordered).svg Malta
  109. Image:Flag of the Marshall Islands.svg Marshall Islands
  110. Image:Flag of Mauritania.svg Mauritania
  111. Image:Flag of Mauritius.svg Mauritius
  112. Image:Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico
  113. Image:Flag of Micronesia.svg Micronesia
  114. Image:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova
  115. Image:Flag of Monaco (bordered).svg Monaco
  116. Image:Flag of Mongolia.svg Mongolia
  117. Image:Flag of Morocco.svg Morocco
  118. Image:Flag of Mozambique.svg Mozambique
  119. Image:Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia
  120. Image:Flag of Nauru.svg Nauru
  121. Image:Flag of Nepal.svg Nepal
  122. Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands
  123. Image:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand
  124. Image:Flag of Nicaragua.svg Nicaragua
  125. Image:Flag of Niger.svg Niger
  126. Image:Flag of Nigeria.svg Nigeria
  127. Image:Flag of Niue.svg Niue
  128. Image:Flag of Norway.svg Norway
  129. Image:Flag of Oman (bordered).svg Oman
  130. Image:Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan
  131. Image:Flag of Palau.svg Palau
  132. Image:Flag of Panama (bordered).svg Panama
  133. Image:Flag of Papua New Guinea.svg Papua New Guinea
  134. Image:Flag of Paraguay.svg Paraguay
  135. Image:Flag of Peru.svg Peru
  136. Image:Flag of the Philippines.svg Philippines
  137. Image:Flag of Poland (bordered).svg Poland
  138. Image:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal
  139. Image:Flag of Qatar (bordered).svg Qatar
  140. Flag of Romania Romania
  141. Image:Flag of Russia (bordered).svg Russia
  142. Image:Flag of Rwanda.svg Rwanda
  143. Image:Flag of Saint Kitts and Nevis.svg Saint Kitts and Nevis
  144. Image:Flag of Saint Lucia.svg Saint Lucia
  145. Image:Flag of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.svg Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  146. Image:Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa
  147. Image:Flag of San Marino.svg San Marino
  148. Image:Flag of Sao Tome and Principe.svg Sao Tome and Principe
  149. Image:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia
  150. Image:Flag of Senegal.svg Senegal
  151. Image:Flag of Serbia and Montenegro.svg Serbia and Montenegro
  152. Image:Flag of the Seychelles.svg Seychelles
  153. Image:Flag of Sierra Leone.svg Sierra Leone
  154. Image:Flag of Singapore (bordered).svg Singapore
  155. Image:Flag of Slovakia.svg Slovakia
  156. Image:Flag of Slovenia.svg Slovenia
  157. Image:Flag of the Solomon Islands.svg Solomon Islands
  158. Image:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa
  159. Image:Flag of Spain.svg Spain
  160. Image:Flag of Sri Lanka.svg Sri Lanka
  161. Image:Flag of Sudan.svg Sudan
  162. Image:Flag of Suriname.svg Suriname
  163. Image:Flag of Swaziland.svg Swaziland
  164. Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden
  165. Image:Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland
  166. Flag of Syria Syria
  167. Image:Flag of Tajikistan.svg Tajikistan
  168. Image:Flag of Tanzania.svg Tanzania
  169. Image:Flag of Thailand.svg Thailand
  170. Image:Flag of Togo.svg Togo
  171. Image:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga
  172. Image:Flag of Trinidad and Tobago.svg Trinidad and Tobago
  173. Image:Flag of Tunisia.svg Tunisia
  174. Image:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey
  175. Image:Flag of Turkmenistan.svg Turkmenistan
  176. Image:Flag of Tuvalu.svg Tuvalu
  177. Image:Flag of Uganda.svg Uganda
  178. Image:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine
  179. Image:Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg United Arab Emirates
  180. Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom
  181. Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States
  182. Image:Flag of Uruguay.svg Uruguay
  183. Image:Flag of Uzbekistan.svg Uzbekistan
  184. Image:Flag of Vanuatu.svg Vanuatu
  185. Image:Flag of Venezuela.svg Venezuela
  186. Image:Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam
  187. Image:Flag of Yemen.svg Yemen
  188. Image:Flag of Zambia.svg Zambia
  189. Image:Flag of Zimbabwe.svg Zimbabwe
  • Observers:
  1. Image:Flag of Andorra.svg Andorra
  2. Image:Flag of Brunei.svg Brunei
  3. Image:Wappen Vatikanstadt.png Holy See
  4. Image:Flag of Iraq.svg Iraq
  5. Image:Flag of Somalia.svg Somalia

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC or FCCC) 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 aimed at reducing emissions of greenhouse gas 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.

The FCCC was opened for signature on May 9 1992. It entered into force on March 21 1994. Its stated objective is "to achieve stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a low enough level to prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system."

A national greenhouse gas inventory is is an accounting of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and removals that must be submitted by signatories of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Contents

[edit] Annex I and Annex II Countries, and Developing Countries

Signatories to the UNFCCC are split into three groups:

  • Annex I countries (industrialized countries)
  • Annex II countries (developed countries which pay for costs of developing countries)
  • Developing countries.

Annex I countries agree to reduce their emissions (particularly carbon dioxide) to target levels below their 1990 emissions levels. If they cannot do so, they must buy emission credits or invest in conservation.

Developing countries have no immediate restrictions under the UNFCCC. This serves three purposes:

  • Avoids restrictions on growth because pollution is strongly linked to industrial growth, and developing economies can potentially grow very fast.
  • It means that they cannot sell emissions credits to industrialized nations to permit those nations to over-pollute.
  • They get money and technologies from the developed countries in Annex II.

Developing countries may volunteer to become Annex I countries when they are sufficiently developed.

Developing countries are not expected to implement their commitments under the Convention unless developed countries supply enough funding and technology, and this has lower priority than economic and social development and dealing with poverty.

Some opponents of the Convention argue that the split between Annex I and developing countries is unfair, and that both developing countries and developed countries need to reduce their emissions. Some countries claim that their costs of following the Convention requirements will stress their economy. These were some of the reasons given by George W. Bush, President of the United States, for, as his predecessor did, not forwarding the signed Kyoto Protocol to the United States Senate.

[edit] Annex I countries

Annex I countries (industrialized countries): Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, European Union, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States of America (22 countries)

[edit] Annex II countries

Annex II countries (developed countries which pay for costs of developing countries): Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, European Union, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States of America

[edit] U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) was opened for signature at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) conference in Rio de Janeiro (known by its popular title, the Earth Summit). On June 12, 1992, 154 nations signed the UNFCCC, that upon ratification committed signatories' governments to a voluntary "non-binding aim" to reduce atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases with the goal of "preventing dangerous anthropogenic interference with Earth's climate system." These actions were aimed primarily at industrialized countries, with the intention of stabilizing their emissions of greenhouse gases at 1990 levels by the year 2000; and other responsibilities would be incumbent upon all UNFCCC parties. The parties agreed in general that they would recognize "common but differentiated responsibilities," with greater responsibility for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the near term on the part of developed/industrialized countries, which were listed and identified in Annex I of the UNFCCC and thereafter referred to as "Annex I" countries.

On September 8, 1992, President Bush transmitted the UNFCCC for advice and consent of the U.S. Senate to ratification. The Foreign Relations Committee approved the treaty and reported it (Senate Exec. Rept. 102-55) October 1, 1992. The Senate consented to ratification on October 7, 1992, with a two-thirds majority vote. President Bush signed the instrument of ratification October 13, 1992, and deposited it with the U.N. Secretary General.

According to terms of the UNFCCC, having received over 50 countries' instruments of ratification, it entered into force March 24, 1994. Since the UNFCCC entered into force, the parties have been meeting annually in Conferences of the Parties (COP) to assess progress in dealing with climate change, and beginning in the mid-1990s, to negotiate the Kyoto Protocol to establish legally binding obligations for developed countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.

[edit] COP-1, The Berlin Mandate

The UNFCCC Conference of Parties met for the first time in Berlin, Germany in the spring of 1995, and voiced concerns about the adequacy of countries' abilities to meet commitments under the Convention. These were expressed in a U.N. ministerial declaration known as the "Berlin Mandate", which established a 2-year Analytical and Assessment Phase (AAP), to negotiate a "comprehensive menu of actions" for countries to pick from and choose future options to address climate change which for them, individually, made the best economic and environmental sense. The Berlin Mandate exempted non-Annex I countries from additional binding obligations, in keeping with the principle of "common but differentiated responsibilities" established in the UNFCCC­ even though, collectively, the larger, newly industrializing countries were expected to be the world's largest emitters of greenhouse gas emissions 15 years hence.

[edit] COP-2, Geneva, Switzerland

The Second Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC (COP-2) met in July 1996 in Geneva, Switzerland. Its Ministerial Declaration was adopted July 18, 1996, and reflected a U.S. position statement presented by Timothy Wirth, former Under Secretary for Global Affairs for the U.S. State Department at that meeting, which

  1. Accepted the scientific findings on climate change proffered by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its second assessment (1995);
  2. Rejected uniform "harmonized policies" in favor of flexibility;
  3. Called for "legally binding mid-term targets."

[edit] COP-3, The Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change

The Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was adopted by COP-3, in December 1997 in Kyoto, Japan, after intensive negotiations. Most industrialized nations and some central European economies in transition (all defined as Annex B countries) agreed to legally binding reductions in greenhouse gas emissions of an average of 6 to 8% below 1990 levels between the years 2008-2012, defined as the first emissions budget period. The United States would be required to reduce its total emissions an average of 7% below 1990 levels, however neither the Clinton administration nor the Bush administration sent the protocol to Congress for ratification, although it is likely that the U.S. Senate would have rejected it anyway. The Bush administration explicitly rejected the protocol in 2001.

[edit] COP-4, Buenos Aires

COP-4 took place in Buenos Aires in November 1998. It had been expected that the remaining issues unresolved in Kyoto would be finalized at this meeting. However, the complexity and difficulty of finding agreement on these issues proved insurmountable, and instead the parties adopted a 2-year "Plan of Action" to advance efforts and to devise mechanisms for implementing the Kyoto Protocol, to be completed by 2000.

[edit] COP-5, Bonn, Germany

The 5th Conference of Parties to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change met in Bonn, Germany, between October 25 and November 5, 1999. It was primarily a technical meeting, and did not reach major conclusions.

[edit] COP-6, The Hague, Netherlands

When COP-6 convened November 13-November 25, 2000, in The Hague, Netherlands, discussions evolved rapidly into a high-level negotiation over the major political issues. These included major controversy over the United States' proposal to allow credit for carbon "sinks" in forests and agricultural lands, satisfying a major proportion of the U.S. emissions reductions in this way; disagreements over consequences for non-compliance by countries that did not meet their emission reduction targets; and difficulties in resolving how developing countries could obtain financial assistance to deal with adverse effects of climate change and meet their obligations to plan for measuring and possibly reducing greenhouse gas emissions. In the final hours of COP-6, despite some compromises agreed between the United States and some EU countries, notably the United Kingdom, the EU countries as a whole, led by Denmark and Germany, rejected the compromise positions, and the talks in The Hague collapsed. Jan Pronk, the President of COP-6, suspended COP-6 without agreement, with the expectation that negotiations would later resume [1]. It was later announced that the COP-6 meetings (termed "COP-6 bis") would be resumed in Bonn, Germany, in the second half of July. The next regularly scheduled meeting of the parties to the UNFCCC - COP-7 - had been set for Marrakech, Morocco, in October-November, 2001.

[edit] COP-6 "bis," Bonn, Germany

When the COP-6 negotiations resumed July 16-27, 2001, in Bonn, Germany, little progress had been made on resolving the differences that had produced an impasse in The Hague. However, this meeting took place after President George W. Bush had become the U.S. President, and had rejected the Kyoto Protocol in March; as a result the United States delegation to this meeting declined to participate in the negotiations related to the Protocol, and chose to act as observers at that meeting. As the other parties negotiated the key issues, agreement was reached on most of the major political issues, to the surprise of most observers given the low level of expectations that preceded the meeting. The agreements included:

  1. Flexible Mechanisms: The "flexibility" mechanisms which the United States had strongly favored as the Protocol was initially put together, including emissions trading; Joint Implementation (JI); and the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) which allow industrialized countries to fund emissions reduction activities in developing countries as an alternative to domestic emission reductions. One of the key elements of this agreement was that there would be no quantitative limit on the credit a country could claim from use of these mechanisms, but that domestic action must constitute a significant element of the efforts of each Annex B country to meet their targets.
  2. Carbon sinks: ­Credit was agreed to for broad activities that absorb carbon from the atmosphere or store it, including forest and cropland management, and re-vegetation, with no over-all cap on the amount of credit that a country could claim for sinks activities. In the case of forest management, an Appendix Z establishes country-specific caps for each Annex I country, for example, a cap of 13 million tons could be credited to Japan (which represents about 4% of its base-year emissions). For cropland management, countries could receive credit only for carbon sequestration increases above 1990 levels.
  3. Compliance: ­ final action on compliance procedures and mechanisms that would address non-compliance with Protocol provisions was deferred to COP-7, but included broad outlines of consequences for failing to meet emissions targets that would include a requirement to "make up" shortfalls at 1.3 tons to 1, suspension of the right to sell credits for surplus emissions reductions; and a required compliance action plan for those not meeting their targets.
  4. Financing: ­Three new funds were agreed upon to provide assistance for needs associated with climate change; a least-developed-country fund to support National Adaptation Programs of Action; and a Kyoto Protocol adaptation fund supported by a CDM levy and voluntary contributions.

A number of operational details attendant upon these decisions remained to be negotiated and agreed upon, and these were the major issues of the COP-7 meeting that followed.

[edit] COP-7, Marrakech, Morocco

At the COP-7 meeting in Marrakech, Morocco October 29-November 10, 2001, negotiators in effect completed the work of the Buenos Aires Plan of Action, finalizing most of the operational details and setting the stage for nations to ratify the Protocol.[2] [3] The completed package of decisions are known as the Marrakech Accords. The United States delegation continued to act as observers, declining to participate in active negotiations. Other parties continued to express their hope that the United States would re-engage in the process at some point, but indicated their intention to seek ratification of the requisite number of countries to bring the Protocol into force (55 countries representing 55% of developed country emissions of carbon dioxide in 1990). A target date for bringing the Protocol into force was put forward: ­the August-September 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa.

The main decisions at COP-7 included:

  • Operational rules for international emissions trading among parties to the Protocol and for the CDM and joint implementation;
  • A compliance regime that outlines consequences for failure to meet emissions targets but defers to the parties to the Protocol after it is in force to decide whether these consequences are legally binding;
  • Accounting procedures for the flexibility mechanisms;
  • A decision to consider at COP-8 how to achieve to a review of the adequacy of commitments that might move toward discussions of future developing country commitments.

[edit] COP-8, New Delhi, India

October 23November 1 2002

[edit] COP-9, Milan, Italy

December 112 2003

[edit] COP-10, Buenos Aires, Argentina

December 6 – 17, 2004

[edit] COP-11, Montreal, Canada

The United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP 11 or COP/MOP 1) was a global event which took place at the Palais des congrès de Montréal in Montreal, Quebec, Canada from November 28 to December 9, 2005.

The meeting, the 11th Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), was also the first Meeting of the Parties (MOP) to the Kyoto Protocol since their initial meeting in Kyoto in 1997. It was therefore one of the largest intergovernmental conferences on climate change ever. The event marked the entry into force of the Kyoto Protocol.

Hosting more than 10,000 delegates, it was one of Canada's largest international events ever and the largest gathering in Montreal since Expo 67.

See also COP 11 pages at the UNFCCC.

[edit] COP-12, Nairobi, Kenya

The second meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (COP/MOP 2), in conjunction with the twelfth session of the Conference of the Parties to the Climate Change Convention (COP 12), was held in Nairobi, Kenya from 6 to 17 November 2006. At the meeting, the phrase climate tourists was coined to describe some delegates who attended 'to see Africa, take snaps of the wildlife, the poor, dying African children and women'.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

da:UNFCCC de:Klimarahmenkonvention eo:UNFCCC it:Convenzione quadro delle Nazioni Unite sui cambiamenti climatici nl:Klimaatverdrag ja:気候変動枠組条約 ru:Рамочная конвенция ООН об изменении климата fi:YK:n ilmastonmuutoskonventti zh:联合国气候变化框架公约

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