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Scientists sound the alarm
* It fell to scientists to draw international attention to the threats posed by global warming. Evidence in
the 1960s and '70s that concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere were increasing first led
climatologists and others to press for action. It took years before the international community responded.
* In 1988, an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) was created by the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP). This group issued a first assessment report in 1990 which reflected the views of 400 scientists. The
report stated that global warming was real and urged that something be done about it.
* The Panel's findings spurred governments to create the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change. By standards for international agreements, negotiation of the Convention was rapid.
It was ready for signature at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development -- more
popularly known as the "Earth Summit" -- in Rio de Janeiro.
* The IPCC now has a well-established role. It does not conduct its own scientific inquiries, but
reviews worldwide research, issues regular assessment reports (there have now been four), and
compiles special reports and technical papers.
The IPCC Assessment Reports
The preparation of the Assessment Reports on Climate Change is a key activity of the IPCC. The
Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) was released in 2007, and it consists of four volumes: the three IPCC
Working Groups (WGs) Reports and a Synthesis Report (SYR)." The process towards the Fifth
Assessment Report is now underway.
* The IPCC's findings, because they reflect global scientific consensus and are apolitical in character,
form a useful counterbalance to the often highly charged political debate over what to do about climate
change. IPCC reports are frequently used as the basis for decisions made under the Convention, and they
played a major role in the negotiations leading to the Kyoto Protocol, a second, more
far-reaching international treaty on climate change that entered into force on 16 February 2005.
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