Happy birthday Kyoto! What was it again?

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Happy Birthday Kyoto Protocol! This week marks the ten year anniversary. Is it a reason to celebrate?ย Kyoto was our first international agreement to cut emissions, so what can we learn for Paris? asks Alice Bell, writer and researcher on science, technology and theย environment.

The Kyoto Protocol was an iconic international agreement setting targets for countries to cut the emissions of gases that cause climate change. A worldย first.

It was, unsurprisingly, a bit of a compromise. The targets werenโ€™t as high as China or the Alliance Small Island States wanted, but still stronger than those proposed by Canada and the Unitedย States.

Based on a principle of โ€œcommon but differentiated responsibilitiesโ€ the protocol puts responsibility on the shoulders of developed countries. The EU, for example, was expected to cut emissions, but India wasย not.

Although action was largely to be through national policies, it put in place market-based systems whereby countries could buy and sell theirย emissions.

In addition to emissions cuts, the Protocol also reaffirms the idea that developed countries should offer both money and technological support to other countries to help deal with the changes in environment caused by climate change we havenโ€™t been able toย avoid.

It came into force on February 16, 2005.ย Itโ€™s history stretches a lot further back than that though. It was adopted in Kyoto, Japan, on 11 December 1997, and is a development of the principles agreed at theย 1992 Rio UN Earth Summit.

What took us soย long?

To come into force, the Protocol needed to be ratified by at least 55 countries, and that their emissions must account for at least 55% of globalย emissions.

Most of the countries in the world have signed the Protocol. But signing is relatively easy โ€” a symbol of general support. Ratifying the Protocol, on the other hand, carries obligations. This has proved too tough a challenge for some keyย players.

In 2001, George W Bush withdrew the US โ€” which is responsible for around a quarter of world emissions โ€” from the Protocol, claiming it would gravely damage the US economy and was misguided in not including China andย India.

In late 2004, Russia was convinced to join, so a slightly modified idea of the initial Kyoto idealism came into force on February 16,ย 2005.

Arguably, the birthday isnโ€™t much to celebrate. That itโ€™s only a tenth anniversary โ€” rather than a 15th one, for example โ€” is just yet another example of how slow international action on climate change hasย been.

What can we learn from Kyotoโ€™sย anniversary?

Kyoto is worth reflecting on this week not just as an interesting bit of history, but what it can teach us about international climateย negotiations.

Looking at the slow and troubled history of Kyoto โ€” as well as the failure of the 2009 Copenhagen talks โ€” itโ€™s tempting to write off the whole UN-based approach to tackling climate changeย entirely.

But the Paris 2015 deal hopes to take a different approach. Kyoto was always based around different countries making different targets, but Paris will take this further with a process based around a series of pledges. The idea is also that this will be a bit more bottom up than an agreement based on the Kyoto model, or that which failed atย Copenhagen.

Known asย Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (or INDCs), these pledges will outline the steps each country plans to make to reduce their emissions, as well as adaptation plans, and the support they need from/ provide for otherย countries.

These pledges might not, overall, be that ambitious. At this stage, the talk is still confidently assuring everyone that we must and can keep within the key limit ofย two degrees global warming. But many analysts agree this target of two degrees will still condemn many parts of the world, and itโ€™s still reasonably likely that we wonโ€™t see an agreement that really holds people to itย anyway.

But โ€” the defenders of a pledge-based approach argue โ€” we will be able to ratchet up these pledges. We might be starting a lot lower than we need to, but it will offer us a starting point from which more powerful action will happen. In contrast, Kyoto started off reasonably well, but soon hit the stumbling block of the US withdrawing, and Copenhagen fell before it could even get to that sort ofย hurdle.

Itโ€™s easy to feel rather despondent at this point โ€” weโ€™re just playing into George Bushโ€™s erroneous criticism of Kyoto, we need to just force ourselves to be more ambitious โ€” but equally the apparently softer take of Parisโ€™ pledge-based system might ultimately be its saving. How many people itโ€™ll save โ€” and how many itโ€™ll condemn โ€” is yet to beย seen.

A version of this post originally appeared on Road toย Paris

Photo:ย U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via Wikimediaย Commons

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