The UN's Conference of Parties on Climate Change has been meeting for 17 years. In 1997, it produced the Kyoto Protocol, supposedly to hold industrial nations accountable for the impact of greenhouse emissions. But two years ago in Copenhagen, heads of state, including President Obama, could only produce a two-page, nonbinding agreement to help poor nations cope with climate change, and details are still being debated. The Kyoto pact will expire at the end of next year. This week, 195 countries are attending the latest so-called Earth Summit in Durban, South Africa. Will they save the Kyoto Protocol or allow it to expire even as the impacts of climate change are being felt all over the world?
Future Hazy as Climate Talks Continue
Credits
Guests:
- Fiona Harvey - environment correspondent, The Guardian - @fionaharvey
- Jennifer Morgan - World Resources Institute - @climatemorgan
- Bjørn Lomborg - Copenhagen Consensus Center - @bjornlomborg
- Bill McKibben - co-founder of 350.org - @billmckibben