Greenpeace Czech Republic marks Kyoto coming into force with a large banner reading "Kyoto for the Earth" in the front of famous National Museum in the centre of Prague. The museum is a place marking historic and symbolic events in recent Czech history.

What is the Kyoto Protocol?

The Kyoto Protocol is the world's only international agreement with binding targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  As such, it is the primary tool governments of the world have to address climate change.  Specifically, the Protocol requires a nominal five per cent reduction in emissions by developed countries world-wide relative to 1990 levels by 2008-2012.  To meet this target, each country is obligated to reach its individual target - Canada by six per cent, the European Union (EU[15]) eight per cent, Japan six per cent, etc.  These individual targets are based on past greenhouse gas emissions.

In addition to legally binding national emissions targets, the Kyoto Protocol includes various trading mechanisms.  Now that the Protocol is law, formal preparations will begin to create a 'global' carbon market for emissions trading by 2008, and the so-called 'flexible mechanisms' - the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Joint Implementation (JI) - will become operational.

The Kyoto Protocol was originally agreed on in 1997, although many crucial details were left to later talks.  In order to enter into force (become law) the Protocol required ratification by at least 55 countries accounting for at least 55 per cent of the carbon dioxide emissions from Annex B (industrialised) nations.  So far, 129 countries have ratified or acceded to the Protocol.  It passed the number of countries test in 2002, and finally passed the second hurdle with ratification by the Russian Federation in late 2004.

Notably absent from the Protocol is the US, which shows no signs of ratifying the treaty, at least not as long as the Bush administration is in power, even though the US is the world's biggest greenhouse gas polluter.  Australia, Liechtenstein, Croatia and Monaco also have yet to complete the ratification process.

The Clean Development Mechanism (Article 12)

The Clean Development Mechanism is designed to generate emissions reduction credits for Annex I countries that finance projects in non-Annex I countries that are signatories to the treaty.  For example, Canada might finance an energy efficiency project in China, or Japan could finance a renewable energy project in Morocco. These projects must have the approval of the CDM executive board, and in addition to generating measurable emissions reductions against a business-as-usual baseline, they should contribute to sustainable development in the developing country which are partners.

Joint Implementation (Article 3)

Joint Implementation allows industrialised countries with emissions reduction targets to cooperate in meeting them.  For example, German-financed energy efficiency projects in Russia, or Norwegian-financed renewable energy projects in Hungary, which generate emissions reductions, under specific circumstances can be credited to the country that finances them.  In theory, this is a more economically efficient means of generating the same overall emissions reductions for industrialised countries.

See also 'Sinks' and other possible pitfalls.

Will the Kyoto Protocol "save the climate"?

The Kyoto Protocol is an important first step, as it was intended to be.  It has always been recognized that the Kyoto Protocol will not be enough on its own.  To avoid dangerous climate change, the world needs at least 30 per cent cuts by industrialized countries by 2020, increasing to 70-80 per cent cuts by mid-century.  Anything less than this will consign our children and theirs to a very unpleasant and very unstable world.

The decisions that governments, industry and civil society make over the next decade or two will be decisive. You have a say in those decision, and your help is needed.  See our Take Action page for what you can do.

More information:

Kyoto pitfalls

International negotiations - Greenpeace position statements and first hand reports from international meetings.

Text of the Kyoto Protocol

Kyoto Protocol becomes law - Greenpeace marks the event and calls for action around the world.

The latest updates

 

Apple responds to customers, starts down road to clean energy iCloud

Blog entry by Gary Cook | May 24, 2012

This week, after hundreds of thousands of Apple customers and Greenpeace supporters asked the company to use clean energy instead of dirty coal, it announced a significant investment in local renewable energy to power its data ... Read more >

Shell: Dear Greenpeace, we know where you live...

Blog entry by Diego Creimer | May 17, 2012

Yesterday morning, staff at Greenpeace Germany received an important-looking letter from Shell - well, Shell’s Legal Services department. Over the next 24 hours or so, identical letters arrived at other Greenpeace offices, ... Read more >

Greenpeace activists project supporters’ messages on the wall of Apple headquarters...

Feature story | May 15, 2012 at 9:13

Toronto, ON—Greenpeace activists projected Facebook posts, tweets, and photos from supporters onto a wall of the company’s Cupertino headquarters last night, asking Apple to clean their iCloud by powering those data centres with renewable energy... Read more >

Greenpeace Canada to denounce the "biomess" at the UN

Blog entry by Nicolas Mainville | May 7, 2012

Is wood energy good or bad? This is the question that will be asked in a policy debate held by the UN/FAO to many international stakeholders in Geneva this week. Greenpeace Canada will be representing the environmental community... Read more >

Apple: Think Different about your dirty energy

Blog entry by Kumi Naidoo | April 26, 2012

Activists released hundreds of black balloons in stores to represent the dirty cloud. The Internet and social media are extraordinary engines of change helping to drive revolutions and positive social change. They’ve become... Read more >

Greenpeace activists stage ‘cloud cleaning’ demonstration at Toronto Apple store

Feature story | April 24, 2012 at 14:00

Today, Greenpeace activists staged a demonstration at the Apple store in Toronto’s Eaton Centre as part of a campaign to get the company to power its massive data centres with renewable energy instead of coal. Read more >

Apple, Amazon and Microsoft choose dirty energy to power growing cloud

Feature story | April 17, 2012 at 7:00

As more people around the world use cloud computing to store and share their data on the Internet, major IT companies are resorting to dirty energy like coal and nuclear power to accommodate the demand, according to a Greenpeace rep­ort released... Read more >

Seven of us climbed up that drillship to stop Arctic drilling, but 133,000 of us came...

Blog entry by Bunny | February 27, 2012

As we sat anxiously in the office last Friday waiting for the 'we made it' call we never dreamed that four days later we would have witnessed such a massive media storm, such overwhelming global support and such tenacity from our... Read more >

TV star Lucy Lawless blocks Shell arctic driller

Feature story | February 23, 2012 at 13:24

New Zealand actor Lucy Lawless, star of hit US TV show Spartacus and Xena: Warrior Princess, joined Greenpeace activists in stopping a Shell-contracted oil drillship from departing New Zealand for the Arctic, where its exploratory oil drilling... Read more >

Canada: Climate Criminal

Blog entry by Rex Weyler | January 5, 2012

At the dawn of the 21st century a new political regime has transformed Canada from global hero – once standing up for peace, people, and nature – to global criminal, plunging into war, eroding civil rights, and destroying environments. Read more >

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