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In December, the United Nations will hold a conference in Copenhagen, Denmark to establish how the world is going to deal with climate change. The Kyoto Protocol, which every industrialized nation except the United States agreed to, is expiring soon, and the world is desperate for US leadership this time around. Greenpeace is calling on heads of state to personally commit to attend the Copenhagen negotiations to ensure a fair, ambitious, and binding deal is reached.
To avoid the most catastrophic impacts of climate change, countries need to enact a legally binding treaty that reduces global warming pollution enough to keep the world from warming 2 degrees.
The bulk of those cuts need to be made in the industrialized world, which is responsible for most of the problem and has the resources to deal with the problem. Wealthy nations like the US also need to help poorer countries to develop using clean energy like wind and solar instead of coal.
And perhaps most importantly, the world needs to agree to a plan to stop deforestation, which is responsible for more of the climate change problem than all of the planes, trains and automobiles in the world, combined.
President Obama must go to the Copenhagen negotiations and push for a climate treaty that is based in science—not political convenience.
You can read the report online at: http://www.unep.org/compendium2009/
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