Global Warming Guide

Global Warming Charts Section


 

Global Warming Charts Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Global Warming And Building Green |
The US Mayors Climate Protection Agreement On Global Warming |
How Global Warming Affects The Ecosystems |
Research On Global Warming |
Global Warming And Building Green |
What The Other Side Is Saying About Global Warming |
Global Warming And The Significance Of Rising Water Temperatures |
Possible ShortTerm Benefits Of Global Warming |
Global Warming And The Significance Of Rising Water Temperatures |
Books That Support Or Deny The Concept Of Global Warming |

List of global warming Articles

Global Warming Charts Best seller



Best Global Warming Charts products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Global Warming Charts sponsors


 

Latest Global Warming Charts Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Global Warming Charts!



 

Welcome to Global Warming Guide

 

Global Warming Charts Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Global Warming Charts. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

The Kyoto Protocol and Global Warming

from:

The Kyoto Protocol was set up in a session of the United Nations in Japan in the year 1997. This initiative was set forth to reduce harmful emissions and to lessen global warming. It was adopted and contains goals for emissions that are legally binding for the countries involved.

The aim of the Kyoto Protocol is to prevent countries from causing global warming through human activity. There are some natural forces that contribute to global warming. However, it is the disruption of the climate by humans that is most damaging. This is what is addressed in the Kyoto Protocol.

The developed countries of the world have made commitments to reducing emissions in a timely manner. They have target dates and set levels they are supposed to reach by those times. There are six greenhouse gases that are meant to be reduced by 5% in the next few years. Three of these are carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. If these countries are successful, it will reduce global warming.

It is interesting that, while many countries have agreed to reduce emissions, some countries will be allowed to raise emissions. These countries are Norway, Australia, and Iceland. These countries control global warming by keeping their increases to a certain level.

Other countries are asked to simply maintain the levels of emissions they already have. Countries such as Russia, Ukraine, and New Zealand do their part against global warming by maintaining the status quo.

The goals of the Kyoto Protocol to decrease global warming are supposed to be realized between the years 2008-2012. It seems that this will be a near impossibility at this point for many countries. The US especially is turning its back on the provisions of the Kyoto Protocol. The initiative is given lip service by the powers that be, but real progress has been slow coming.

One way developed countries can receive credit under the Kyoto protocol is to help others. If developed countries sponsor emissions reducing programs in developing countries, they receive credit for this. It shows their commitment to the reduction of global warming.

Yet, not all developed countries have adopted the Kyoto Protocol. One glaring example is the US. As of December 2006, the US was one of the 169 governments that had signed the agreement to cut down on global warming. However, it did not ratify the agreement, so the treaty has no power in the US. Another hold-out was Australia.

There were two conditions that needed to be met to put this treaty into full legal force. One was that 55 countries needed to sign up. That condition was met in 2002. In 2005, the other condition was met when 55% of the developed countries had joined the effort to stop global warming.

The Kyoto Protocol was designed to hold developed countries up to a high standard. Developed countries are not only expected to create ways to reduce global warming. They are also rewarded if they help other countries to do the same. When every developed country joins in the struggle to reduce global warming, the earth will reap the benefits.



 

Global Warming Charts News

New Billboard Ad Campaign Compares Americans That Believe In Global Warming To Osama Bin Laden

Every day I get the privilege of watching the Fox News panel show The Five and, recently, it's seemed like every other episode has featured an entire segment dedicated to ridiculing and complaining about environmental conservation of any kind. In a few of them, hosts like Greg Gutfeld and Eric Bolling have mentioned President Obama's "flat earth society" comment , seething in anger than anyone ...

Read more...


Global warming hits home

The Williams River was so languid and lovely last Saturday morning that it was almost impossible to imagine the violence with which it must have been running on August 28, 2011. And yet the evidence was all around: sand piled high on its banks, trees still scattered as if by a giant’s fist, and most obvious of all, a utilitarian temporary bridge where for 140 years a graceful covered bridge had ...

Read more...


Is Global Warming Causing More Home Runs in Baseball?

Fox baseball commentator Tim McCarver is a retired baseball catcher whose work as a TV analyst recently got him inducted into the announcers' wing of the Baseball Hall of Fame. He occupies the top TV perch in the sport, and fans either love him or hate him. [More]

Read more...


Our Bad: Historic Paper Ties Texas Droughts to Human-Caused Climate Change

On April 22, 2011, Texas Governor Rick Perry, who has resisted the science of man-made global warming, led the state in prayer: "I, Rick Perry, Governor of Texas, under the authority vested in me ...

Read more...


Does Your Portfolio Need A Carbon Credit ETF?

Currently, there is one Carbon Credit ETN on the market for investors. Should you consider purchasing this product or wait until the market matures?

Read more...