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2009-11-24 05:40:09
Where do greenhouse gas emissions come from?
Which countries are most responsible for causing human-induced climate change?
And have governments pledged tough enough cuts so far to keep the global
average temperature rise within "safe limits"?
As the UN summit in Copenhagen approaches, we look at the past, present and
possible futures of climate change.
Global emissions have risen steadily in recent decades.
But when trying to assign "responsibility" for causing climate change, how
should they be measured?
Populous developing countries such as China and India have relatively high
overall emissions - comparable with many developed countries.
But each of their citizens produces a much smaller amount than counterparts in
regions such as North America or Western Europe.
Countries that industrialised early and grew rich early because of that
industrialisation, such as the UK, Germany and the US, have a higher
"historical footprint".
In some peoples' eyes, this gives them a higher responsibility for curbing the
problem.
A number of academic teams have calculated how emissions are likely to rise in
the next few decades, and what that is likely to mean in terms of rising
temperatures.
Their projections are not exact because there are many sources of uncertainty
in the calculations, including the exact relationship between greenhouse gas
levels and temperature rise.
A number of developed countries and blocs have set targets for cutting their
emissions, some of which depend on what other countries do.
The EU, for example, will cut emissions by 20% from 1990 levels - but if there
is a global deal, that will rise to 30%.
Some developing nations have also pledged to reduce the rate at which their
emissions are growing.
If implemented, are these curbs enough to keep the global average temperature
rise below 2C - the target adopted by G8, the EU and a number of major
developing countries?
According to the European Climate Foundation analysis - and others -
commitments made so far are probably not enough to meet the G8 target.
This shortfall is one of the issues likely to be highlighted during the
Copenhagen conference.