Preamble
Concerned that
human activities have been substantially
increasing the
atmospheric concentrations of
greenhouse gases, that these
increases enhance the
natural greenhouse effect, and that this will result on average in an additional warming of the
Earth's
surface and
atmosphere and may adversely
affect natural ecosystems and
humankind,
Noting that the largest
share of
historical and current
global emissions of
greenhouse gases has originated in
developed countries, that per capita
emissions in
developing countries are still relatively low and that the
share of
global emissions originating in
developing countries will grow to
meet their
social and
development needs,
Noting that there are many uncertainties in predictions of
climate change, particularly with
regard to the
timing,
magnitude and
regional patterns thereof,
Acknowledging that the
global nature of
climate change calls for the widest possible
cooperation by all
countries and their
participation in an effective and appropriate
international response, in
accordance with their
common but differentiated
responsibilities and respective capabilities and their
social and
economic conditions,
Recalling also that
States have, in
accordance with the
Charter of the United Nations and the
principles of
international law, the
sovereign right to exploit their own
resources pursuant to their own
environmental and developmental
policies, and the
responsibility to ensure that
activities within their
jurisdiction or
control do not cause
damage to the
environment of other
States or of
areas beyond the
limits of
national jurisdiction,
Recognizing that
States should enact effective
environmental legislation, that
environmental standards,
management objectives and
priorities should reflect the
environmental and developmental
context to which they apply, and that standards applied by some
countries may be inappropriate and of unwarranted
economic and
social cost to other
countries, in particular
developing countries,
Recalling the
provisions of
General Assembly resolution 44/228 of 22 December 1989 on the
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, and resolutions 43/53 of 6 December 1988, 44/207 of 22 December 1989, 45/212 of 21 December 1990 and 46/169 of 19 December
1991 on
protection of global climate for present and
future generations of
mankind,
Recalling also the
provisions of
General Assembly resolution 44/206 of 22 December 1989 on the possible
adverse effects of
sea-level rise on
islands and
coastal areas, particularly low-lying
coastal areas and the pertinent
provisions of
General Assembly resolution 44/172 of 19 December 1989 on the
implementation of the
Plan of
Action to
Combat Desertification,
Recalling further the
Vienna Convention for the
Protection of the
Ozone Layer, 1985, and the
Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, 1987, as adjusted and amended on 29 June 1990,
Noting the Ministerial
Declaration of the Second
World Climate Conference adopted on 7 November 1990,
Recognizing that
steps required to understand and
address climate change will be
environmentally,
socially and
economically most effective if they are based on
relevant scientific,
technical and
economic considerations and continually re-evaluated in the
light of new findings in these
areas,
Recognizing that various
actions to
address climate change can be justified
economically in their own
right and can also
help in solving other
environmental problems,
Recognizing also the need for
developed countries to take immediate
action in a flexible
manner on the basis of clear
priorities, as a first
step towards comprehensive response
strategies at the
global,
national and, where
agreed,
regional levels that take into
account all
greenhouse gases, with
due consideration of their relative
contributions to the enhancement of the
greenhouse effect,
Recognizing the
special difficulties of those
countries, especially
developing countries, whose economies are particularly dependent on
fossil fuel production, use and
exportation, as a
consequence of
action taken on limiting
greenhouse gas emissions,