Bicol University College of Engineering Legazpi City Vista, Hermialyn B. Bsce-3D
Bicol University College of Engineering Legazpi City Vista, Hermialyn B. Bsce-3D
Bicol University College of Engineering Legazpi City Vista, Hermialyn B. Bsce-3D
College of Engineering
Legazpi City
Climate change is also a change in Earth's climate. This could be a change in Earth's usual
temperature. Or it could be a change in where rain and snow usually fall on Earth.
Weather can change in just a few hours. Climate takes hundreds or even millions of years to
change.
People who study Earth see that Earth's climate is getting warmer. Earth's temperature has
gone up about one degree Fahrenheit in the last 100 years. This may not seem like much. But small
changes in Earth's temperature can have big effects.
Some effects are already happening. Warming of Earth's climate has caused some snow
and ice to melt. The warming also has caused oceans to rise. And it has changed the timing of when
certain plants grow.
Most scientists say that humans can change climate too. People drive cars. People heat and
cool their houses. People cook food. All those things take energy. One way we get energy is by
burning coal, oil and gas. Burning these things puts gases into the air. The gases cause the air to
heat up. This can change the climate of a place. It also can change Earth's climate.
Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century
is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic (man-made) greenhouse gas (GHG)
concentrations. It is likely there has been significant anthropogenic warming over the past 50 years
averaged over each continent (except Antarctica). During the past 50 years, the sum of solar and
volcanic forcing would likely have produced cooling.
CARBON FOOTPRINT
CARBON
FOOTPRINT
BUILDINGS/
PRODUCTS AND
OFFICES/
SERVICES
INDUSTRIES
2. Turn off and unplug all electrical appliances when not in use.
8. Plant a tree.
The climate change adaptation and mitigation are under the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Under the UFCCC, there is an international emissions
reduction treaty called the Kyoto Protocol (KP), also known as the “Climate Protocol”, adopted in
1997 which commits 43 Annex A (developed) countries to limit their greenhouse gas emissions.
The Philippines is not part of the Annex A countries and therefore, has no targets to reduce
its GHG emissions under the Kyoto Protocol. But the Article 12 of the Kyoto Protocol provides the
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) as one of the three modalities for developed countries to
transfer greenhouse gas emission reduction technologies to developing or underdeveloped
countries.
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), defined in Article 12 of the Protocol, allows a
It is the first global, environmental investment and credit scheme of its kind, providing a
A CDM project activity might involve, for example, a rural electrification project using solar
The mechanism stimulates sustainable development and emission reductions, while giving
industrialized countries some flexibility in how they meet their emission reduction or limitation
targets.
Bicol University
College of Engineering
Legazpi City
The role of forests in sequestering carbon and helping to mitigate climate change was
recognized through the Kyoto Protocol. However, only afforestation and reforestation activities were
accepted for inclusion in the Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). Avoided
deforestation, also known as reducing emissions from deforestation, was excluded as an emissions
reduction strategy, only to be reintroduced into United Nations Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) negotiations at its 11th Conference of Parties (CoP) in Montreal in 2005 through a formal
proposal by the Coalition of Rainforest Nations. Negotiations and research ensued, and in 2007, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) identified the forestry sector as the second
leading cause of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions after the energy sector, responsible for
approximately 17% of emissions, largely as a result of deforestation (Pachauri and Reisinger, 2007).
Ensuring proposals for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation (RED) (avoided deforestation) were
later expanded to include reduced emissions from forest degradation.
At the 13th CoP in Bali in 2007, proposals to address Reduced Emissions from Deforestation
and forest Degradation (REDD) received considerable support and the Parties agreed to consider
policy approaches and positive performance-based incentives to address REDD as well as
Bicol University
College of Engineering
Legazpi City
At the 15th CoP in Copenhagen, Denmark held in December 2009, the CoP noted
consensus among some of the Parties with the Copenhagen Accord1, which agreed “on the need to
provide positive incentives to such actions through the immediate establishment of a mechanism
including REDD-plus, to enable the mobilization of financial resources from developed countries”
(UNFCCC, 2009a).
The UNFCCC definition, however, does not articulate what specific carbon stock enhancement
activities would be rewarded, nor clearly prioritizes the delivery of additional environmental and
social benefits from REDD-plus. This PNRPS clarifies the types of forestry activities that should be
pursued nationally and adopts a strong vision of how REDD-plus efforts can deliver additional social,
biodiversity conservation and ecosystem service benefits.
Level of ambition
A move away from legally binding
The negotiations process
Continued progress in the international negotiations and by key countries like China and
India will assure policymakers that the U.S. is not alone in the effort to combat climate
change.
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