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ID129231
Title ProperThink again
Other Title Informationclimate treaties, why the glacial pace of climate diplomacy isn't ruining the planet
LanguageENG
AuthorShorr, David
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)An Ironclad Treaty Is the Only Way to Save the Planet. Don't count on it. Time is running short for the international community to tackle climate change. Pressure to act comes from rising temperatures and sea levels, superstorms, brutal droughts, and diminishing food crops. It also comes from fears that these problems are going to get worse. Modern economies have already boosted the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere by 40 percent since the Industrial Revolution. If the world stays on its current course, CO2 levels could double by century's end, potentially raising global temperatures several more degrees. (The last time the planet's CO2 levels were so high was 15 million years ago, when temperatures were 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit higher than they are today.) Another source of pressure, however, is self-imposed. Under the auspices of the United Nations, the next global climate treaty -- to be negotiated among some 200 countries, with the central goal of cutting greenhouse gas emissions -- should be enacted in 2015, to replace the now-outmoded 1997 Kyoto Protocol. (Once passed by state parties, the new treaty would actually go into effect in 2020.)
`In' analytical NoteForeign Policy Vol. , No.205; March-April 2014: p.38-43
Journal SourceForeign Policy Vol. , No.205; March-April 2014: p.38-43
Key WordsGlobal Warming ;  Climate Change ;  Climate Treaties ;  Glacial Pace ;  Climate Diplomacy ;  Modern Economies ;  Industrial Revolution ;  Global Climate Treaty ;  Global Negotiation ;  United Nations ;  Environmental Security ;  Environmental Security Strategy ;  Global Cooperation ;  Ironclad Treaty