ESAHomeUnderstanding Our PlanetSecuring Our EnvironmentBenefiting Our Economy
   
About Observing the Earth
How does Earth Observation work?How to get Earth observation dataIntegrating Earth Observation in your jobEarth Observation users speak
EO programmes
The Living PlanetGMES
ESA's Earth Observing missions
Envisat overviewERS overviewEarth Explorers overviewSentinels overviewMSG overviewMetOp overviewProba-1 overviewThird Party Missions overview
Opportunities with us
Multimedia
Services
CalendarSubscribe
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
News printer friendly page
Flood in the north of Italy
Flood in the north of Italy
Talks commence on a global strategy for climate change
 
14 November 2000
The disastrous gales and flooding that hit most of Europe in recent weeks should have brought home, to Europeans at least, the potential danger of climate change. This makes the conference now taking place in the Netherlands particularly pertinent.
 
Ministers and diplomats from 160 countries are attending COP 6, the 6th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, that is taking place in the Hague from 13 to 24 November. It is hoped that the Conference will accelerate international action to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions, which scientists increasingly acknowledge to be a contributing factor to climate change.

A global strategy on climate change was first agreed upon at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and the Kyoto Protocol was drawn up in Japan in 1997. However, to date only 30 countries - all from the developing world - have ratified the Protocol, which sets targets for reducing the greenhouse gases emitted by industrialised countries.  
 
Low levels stratospheric ozone
ERS-2/GOME map of ozone thinning over Europe
According to Michael Zammit Cutajar, the Convention’s Executive Secretary and Jan Pronk, President of the Hague Conference, “It is time to ‘work it out’ for the sake of the credibility of the international community and, more importantly, to protect our planet from developments that could totally disrupt life on Earth”.

ESA plays an important role in monitoring climate change through its Earth remote sensing satellites ERS-1 and ERS-2, the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment (GOME) and the Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) satellites.
 
 

 
 
Related news
About climate changeWill we be swamped by rising seas?Satellite ally in the battle against floodsSatellite eyes focus on El Niño
Related links
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)Earthnet OnlineERSGOMEMeteosat Second GenerationAbout Observing the Earth
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2011 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.