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Concept Version 7
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Climate Change

Global warming policy can be quite contentious because competing interests get involved in the policy-making and implementation process.

Learning Objective

  • Analyze the difficulties confronting cooperative international action on climate


Key Points

    • Global warming, or climate change, is the idea that the actions of human beings are drastically changing weather patterns on the planet, including the temperature.
    • Most scientists agree that the Earth has warmed significantly in recent years. They are quite confident about the human influence on change. However, there is disagreement about what to do about global warming.
    • While 191 countries had ratified the Kyoto Protocol by September 2011, the U.S. was not one of them.
    • Another idea for slowing down carbon emissions is a cap-and-trade system. As a market-based system, it would see limits or caps set on the mount of greenhouse gases that could be emitted.
    • As with all environmental policy, global warming policy can be quite contentious because competing interests get involved in the policy-making and implementation process.

Terms

  • anthropogenic

    Having its origin in the influence of human activity on nature.

  • global warming

    he sustained increase in the average temperature of the earth, sufficient to cause climate change

  • cap-and-trade

    Cap-and-trade is a market-based approach used to control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of pollutants.

  • Kyoto Protocol

    The Kyoto Protocol is a protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC or FCCC) that set binding obligations on the industrialized countries to reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases.


Full Text

Global Warming

Global warming, or climate change, is the idea that the actions of human beings are drastically changing weather patterns on the planet, including the temperature. Most scientists agree that the Earth has warmed significantly in recent years. The warming is particularly true around the poles . This is causing polar icecap melting and a degradation of the protective ozone layer. Most scientists are also confident about the anthropogenic drivers of climate change. However, there is a great deal of division over the question of how important these changes are and what should be done about it.

Arctic Wildlife

Global warming is disproportionately affecting the polar regions, and changing the landscape for arctic wildlife like the polar bear.

One of the key problems is that the immediate effects of climate change are likely to be felt by counties with less political and economic clout. These include many countries in the global south and island nations that will be impacted if the sea levels rise.

One aspect that has been identified as important in slowing down climate change is the reduction in greenhouse gases, also referred to as carbon emissions.

Because of the global impact of these emissions, international treaties have tried to address the issue. The Kyoto Protocol was one such treaty, first introduced in Kyoto, Japan in 2005. While 191 countries had ratified the agreement by September 2011, the U.S. was not one of them.

Another idea for slowing down carbon emissions is a cap-and-trade system. This is a market-based system that would see limits, or caps, set on the amount of greenhouse gasses that could be emitted. Companies would purchase permits for a certain level of emissions. A market for these permits would be created so companies that produced lower levels could trade their permits with companies that wished to pollute at a higher rate.

As with all environmental policy, global warming policies can be quite contentious because competing interests get involved in the policy-making and implementation process. One difficulty is that the process has become highly politicized. Republican politicians often questioning the science behind climate change. Add to that the difficulty that is caused by highly influential business lobby groups, and it becomes apparent why it is so difficult to pass legislation to try and slow climate change.

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