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UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
192 countries have
ratified the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) that aims at stabilising the level of greenhouse gases in
the atmosphere at a level that prevents dangerous human-made
climate change.
In 1990, the UN
General Assembly decided to begin formulating its first real
climate convention. The background for this decision was gloomy:
That same year the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had
released its first synthesis report. It pointed out, that
increasing emissions of greenhouse gases could affect the Earth's
environment on an unprecedented and potentially very violent
scale.
In June 1992, during an environmental conference held in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) was signed by 154 countries, including Denmark. The
convention has since been ratified by 192 countries, including the
United States.
Objective: stabilise greenhouse gases
The objective of UNFCCC is to stabilise the atmospheric
content of greenhouse gases at a level that prevents dangerous
human-made climate change. According to the convention's statement
of purpose, greenhouse gases should be stabilised in a way that
allows ecosystems the ability to adapt in a natural way. This means
that food security must not be harmed, and the potential for
sustainable development – social and economic – is not
compromised.
The convention is a “framework convention”. This means that it is a
comprehensive tool for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions,
but contains no binding obligations to reduce them.
Annual Conferences of the Parties
Each year the parties to the convention convene at a Conference of
the Parties. The conference, known as a COP, is the highest organ
in climate negotiations and decisions on the implementation of the
UNFCCC are made at these conferences. Conferences usually last 14
days and all countries that have signed the UNFCCC are represented.
Typically, several thousand participating delegates from member
governments and observer organisations, journalists and business
and civil society are present. In total there have been fourteen
climate conferences. Latest COP14 in Poznan, Polen, December
2008.
The UNFCCC is administered by the UN Climate Secretariat, which is
based in Bonn, Germany. Among the secretariat's tasks is to keep
track of the countries that have ratified the Kyoto Protocol, as
well as their reports on developments in their emissions of
greenhouse gases. It is also responsible for such tasks as
determining the agenda of the UN conferences and producing
background papers.