From Positive News Media
PGMA bats for compliance by industrialized nations on level of greenhouse gas emissions
By
Dec 2, 2008 - 3:58:39 AM
HONG
KONG, Dec. 3 (PNA) -- President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo batted strongly yesterday for compliance by industrialized countries of the Kyoto Protocol
binding various countries to reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases
and the retention of the carbon credit mechanism of the agreement.
The
President made the call during the opening plenary session of the
Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) at the Grand Hyatt Hong Kong. This is
the first time that the CGI forum is being held outside the United
States.
The
President -- who is attending the forum upon the special invitation of
former US President Bill Clinton, her college classmate at Georgetown
University -- said the Philippines’ ''needs are very small compared to
China and the US but we find the carbon credit mechanism very useful
and I hope that it can be extended beyond the period of the Kyoto
Protocol.''
A
legally binding agreement, the Kyoto Protocol calls on industrialized
economies to reduce their collective emissions of greenhouse gases –
carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, sulfur hexafluoride HFCs and
PFCs – by 5.2 percent compared to 1990 levels.
This
represents a 29-percent reduction in the greenhouse gases compared to
the emission levels that could be expected by 2010 without the Kyoto
agreement.
The
first term of commitment of the Kyoto Protocol ends in 2012. UN member
countries are looking at other means of financing the greenhouse gas
emissions program.
The
President said that Toyota Motors Corp. in the Philippines has been
using carbon credits to reforest northern Philippines' mountain ranges.
She
added that carbon credits are also being used in the Philippines to
transform methane gas from garbage dumps to electric power.
''I
think the carbon credits are very useful... It is very useful for the
Philippines,” she stressed, adding that she had attended several fora
that made “fun'' of carbon credits.
Carbon
credits are a key component of national and international emissions
trading schemes that have been implemented to mitigate global warming.
They
provide a way to reduce greenhouse effect emissions on an industrial
scale by capping total annual emissions and letting the market assign a
monetary value to any shortfall through trading.
The concept of carbon credits came into existence as a result of the increasing awareness of the need for controlling emissions.
The
mechanism was formalized in the Kyoto Protocol, an international
environmental treaty intended to achieve stabilization of greenhouse
gas concentrations in the atmosphere.
The
first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol ends in 2012, and by then
a new international framework would have been negotiated. (PNA)
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