Europese Unie ratificeert Kyoto Protocol

(31-5-2002)
Ter gelegenheid van de ratificatie van het Kyoto Protocol door de Europese Unie en haar lidstaten vindt er vandaag een plechtigheid plaats in het VN hoofdgebouw in New York. Minister Pronk van milieu zal samen met zijn Europese collega's een bijeenkomst bijwonen met VN Secretaris-Generaal Kofi Annan. De Europese Unie doet een oproep aan andere industrielanden ook spoedig te ratificeren.
Op de EU milieuraad van 4 maart hadden de Europese ministers van milieu besloten om het Kyoto Protocol voor 1 juni te ratificeren. Het Kyoto Protocol treedt in werking 3 maanden nadat tenminste 55 landen het protocol hebben ondertekend die gezamenlijk verantwoordelijk zijn voor tenminste 55% van de totale CO2 uitstoot van industrielanden in 1990.
De lidstaten van de Europese Unie zijn samen verantwoordelijk voor een kwart van de totale CO2 emissie in 1990. Ratificatie door andere industrielanden is essentieel om het Kyoto Protocol in werking te laten treden. De Verenigde Staten, verantwoordelijk voor 36% van de CO2 emissie in 1990, hebben eerder aangegeven het Kyoto Protocol niet te zullen ratificeren.
Nederland heeft de  parlementaire procedure twee maanden geleden afgerond nadat de Eerste Kamer op 19 maart en de Tweede Kamer eind februari unaniem de regering toestemming hebben gegeven om het Kyoto Protocol te ratificeren.
Als het Kyoto Protocol in werking treedt is Nederland verplicht om in de periode 2008-2012 6% minder broeikasgassen gemiddeld per jaar uit te stoten ten opzichte van 1990.
Vorig jaar is onder leiding van minister Pronk in Bonn een politiek akkoord gesloten over de uitvoering van het Kyoto Protocol.


Europe Will Ratify Kyoto Climate Protocol Friday


BRUSSELS, Belgium, May 30, 2002 (ENS) - Representatives from all European Union governments and the European Commission will formally ratify the Kyoto Protocol on climate change at a ceremony Friday at UN Headquarters in New York. The move marks a key step towards entry into force of binding greenhouse gas emission limits for industrialized countries.

European Union ratification of the protocol is a symbolic step, underlining the bloc's determination to champion the agreement and the multilateral response to climate change that it embodies against obstruction led by the United States. The move pushes aside fears that Europe would not come through on its own promise to ratify by May 31. It will give the European Union strong moral authority at the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development in late August and early September.

The EU chose May 31 as its ratification deadline in the hope of seeing the protocol enter into force during the summit. In practice this cannot happen because too few other industrialized countries will ratify in time, but
Europe will be able to claim that it did its bit.  Ratification on time looked in doubt up to the very last minute, with the
whole bloc dependent on approval of its two last members, Italy and Greece. The Italian Senate formally approved the step last night. Greece's approval came through today.   
Simultaneous ratification by all EU Member States is required because the protocol sets the bloc a collective target to cut greenhouse gas emissions by eight percent between 2008 and 2012. Under this arrangement, individual
EU countries have taken on widely differing commitments through a burden sharing system.
The Kyoto Protocol requires 38 industrialized countries to cut their emissions of six heat trapping greenhouse gases from 1990 levels by an average of 5.2 percent between 2008 and 2012, known as the first commitment
period. The emissions of developing countries such as China, India and Brazil will be addressed in future negotiations.

The protocol will enter into force 90 days after it is ratified by 55 countries, including industrialized states accounting for at least 55 percent of 1990 greenhouse gas emissions from this group. With EU ratification, the first requirement will be met. The second requirement now looks certain also to be fulfilled, but probably not for another few months.
Romania and the Czech Republic have already ratified the protocol, and other Eastern European countries are committed to doing so soon. Norway could officially ratify on Friday or Monday. Japan is set to retify next week. The Japanese Cabinet will ratify the protocol on June 4, Environment Minister Hiroshi Oki said last Friday. The
protocol was agreed in 1997 in the Japanese city of Kyoto. Under the requirement, which is legally binding, Japan must reduce its emissions by   six percent. This leaves only Russian support needed for the 55 percent of 1990 emissions barrier to be passed, which is expected later this year.

In a joint statement in Moscow Wednesday at the close of the Russia-European Union Summit, leaders of both governments pledged their support for the protocol. Russian President Vladimir Putin, European Council President J.M. Aznar of Spain, and European Commission President Romano Prodi stated, "We will make every necessary effort to ensure that the Kyoto Protocol becomes a real tool for solving the problems of global warming as soon as possible." The leaders also confirmed their readiness to "cooperate closely" in preparing the World Conference on Climate Change to be held in Russia in 2003.

Scientific observations show the Earth's surface is warming, according to a comprehensive 2001 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Globally, the 1990s was the warmest decade on record. "Most of observed
warming over the last 50 years is likely due to increases in greenhouse gas concentrations due to human activities," the IPCC said. Increasing concentrations of the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, over the 21st century are "virtually certain to be mainly due to fossil fuel  emissions," the IPCC said. Combustion of oil, gas and coal produce emissions of carbon dioxide which traps the Sun's heat close to Earth instead of allowing it to radiate normally back out into space. Last November, past IPCC chairman Dr. Robert Watson warned that waiting too long to curb global warming could result in irreversible climate change. In a speech to the 7th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, of which the Kyoto Protocol is a part, Dr. Watson said, "Inertia is a widespread inherent characteristic of the interacting climate, ecological, and socioeconomic systems. Thus some impacts of anthropogenic climate change may be slow to become apparent, and some could be irreversible if climate change is not limited in both rate and magnitude before associated thresholds, - whose positions may be poorly known, are crossed." Dr. Watson said that failure to control global warming would result in "more hot days, heat waves, heavy precipitation events and fewer cold days."