The eighteenth Conference of the Parties (COP 18) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the ninth Conference of Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 8) came to a close in the evening of 8 December 2012. This report lays out the main developments in Doha and assesses the main outcomes. The first chapter outlines the overall situation coming into Doha. The subsequent chapters cover the negotiations on the future of the Kyoto Protocol, the discussions under the Durban Platform on developing a new comprehensive climate agreement by 2015 and increasing short-term ambition, and further near-term action under the UNFCCC
The recently adopted global climate deal is expected to enter into force in 2020, at the end of the ...
This report provides an overview of the development of the negotiations within the UNFCCC since COP ...
The “Doha climate gateway”: limited progress toward a global agreement / Nathan Hultman and Claire L...
Ce rapport est disponible dans : Climate BriefThe Doha climate conference (November 26 - December 8,...
In what has become normal procedure at the international climate negotiations, the 2013 United Natio...
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC or FCCC) is an international envir...
The last conference of the Parties that took place in Durban in 2011 has put climate negotiations at...
Panama Climate Talks Signal What’s Ahead in Durban / Lynann Butkiewicz. Weathervane, 13/10/2011 http...
This report discusses a broad array of issues surrounding the global climate change, such as the Uni...
Doha/COP 18: Gateway to a new climate change agreement / Andrei Marcu. Brussels : CEPS, 13 December ...
4 p.Expectations about the COP18 Doha round of climate negotiations were low and countries were succ...
The author presents the origins and evolution of the negotiation process within the framework of the...
The final stretch of the Doha climate talks / Nathan Hultman and Claire Langley, Brookings, 5/12/201...
Following the climate conferences of Copenhagen and Durban, the international climate politics are a...
The fourth Conference of the Parties (COP4) under the Climate Convention (UNFCCC) took place in Buen...
The recently adopted global climate deal is expected to enter into force in 2020, at the end of the ...
This report provides an overview of the development of the negotiations within the UNFCCC since COP ...
The “Doha climate gateway”: limited progress toward a global agreement / Nathan Hultman and Claire L...
Ce rapport est disponible dans : Climate BriefThe Doha climate conference (November 26 - December 8,...
In what has become normal procedure at the international climate negotiations, the 2013 United Natio...
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC or FCCC) is an international envir...
The last conference of the Parties that took place in Durban in 2011 has put climate negotiations at...
Panama Climate Talks Signal What’s Ahead in Durban / Lynann Butkiewicz. Weathervane, 13/10/2011 http...
This report discusses a broad array of issues surrounding the global climate change, such as the Uni...
Doha/COP 18: Gateway to a new climate change agreement / Andrei Marcu. Brussels : CEPS, 13 December ...
4 p.Expectations about the COP18 Doha round of climate negotiations were low and countries were succ...
The author presents the origins and evolution of the negotiation process within the framework of the...
The final stretch of the Doha climate talks / Nathan Hultman and Claire Langley, Brookings, 5/12/201...
Following the climate conferences of Copenhagen and Durban, the international climate politics are a...
The fourth Conference of the Parties (COP4) under the Climate Convention (UNFCCC) took place in Buen...
The recently adopted global climate deal is expected to enter into force in 2020, at the end of the ...
This report provides an overview of the development of the negotiations within the UNFCCC since COP ...
The “Doha climate gateway”: limited progress toward a global agreement / Nathan Hultman and Claire L...