At a pre-conference press briefing held in Copenhagen, UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer called Copenhagen a turning point on the road to a safe climate future.
He referred to the almost daily announcements by countries of new targets or plans of action to cut emissions as simply unprecedented, and urged governments to give a strong and long-term response to the urgent challenge of climate change.
Governments must deliver fast and effective implementation on adaptation, technology and capacity-building for developing countries; ambitious commitments to cut and limit emissions, as well as both start-up funding and a long-term funding commitment; and a shared vision on a low-emissions future for all.
The Kyoto Protocol, he said, is the only legally binding instrument we have to address climate change, and the vast majority of countries want it to continue. They also want to build an approach under the Convention that encompasses the United States, and that allows for both immediate financing and the engagement of developing countries.
THE WORLD IS CHNGEING ( unless you give us cold hard cash) do you really think all the money will be spent on the climate ,do you trust the goverment still, they have already nicked your penson. Your saveings, WAKE UP TO THE NWO
fingleweed 2 years ago
I do feel a warming coming on, not global warming, but a warm fuzzy feeling, maybe not unlike Chris Mathews tingley feeling he felt during the last election. My fuzzy feeling comes from the thought that if the libtards keep all this BS up it's going to be a great year for conservatives in 2010. It feels kinda like when you've had good sex and are enjoying a cigarette afterwards....Ah-h-h!....Yes!....It don't get no better than this!
dkkght46 2 years ago
climategate your new world order will never happen
sirus10 2 years ago