Climate change is one of the most imperative, contemporary points of concern afflicting humanity, the Earth, and the often volatile, disputing political relations between every nation within our international community and its diversified, global consciousness. The upcoming Climate Change Summit in Paris, which will devise an international agreement revolving around a global effort of environmental preservation among 196 nations, aims to prevent future damage from the effects of climate change, emphasizing the necessity for each nation voiced at the conference to attain a mutual, ethical, and progressive plan of realistic, environmental resolutions, in addition to supplementary records promoting global action. Further, not only is the Summit offering declarations requiring the need for a global consensus and grasp on the reality of these various environmental issues correlated to climate change, but it is sparking an additional global cooperation and international pressure to take the appropriate action in alleviating and completely averting future devastation to our environment and the natural balance of Earth’s metabolic, inherent generation and dissolution of, for example, toxic/harmless greenhouse gases, essential agricultural growth, and, of course, healthy tidal patterns dependent on our oceans’ receipt of specific organic substances, and their physical fusion with these miraculously refined elements - as so courteously granted by Earth’s various environmental syntheses and its global, innate transference of these composites to their complementary, reciprocal correlative.
The Summit will commence on November 30th, 2015 and reach a hopeful conclusion by December 11th, 2015. The opposing political convictions, the number of governmental authorities and representatives present, the ultimate objectives outlined that must be fulfilled *at the venue** to make it possible to even attain the overarching, most significantly pivotal aim that provoked the need for this summitry which, clearly, lies in the achievement of global consensus on the solutions to climate change (phew!) and, of course, environmental preservation. Let’s just soak that all in for a bit...
So, over the course of approximately 12 days, how do you, the reader, believe that this international conference in Paris on the matter of environmental preservation, between 196 countries, will reach its intended agreement? And, may I assure you, it is highly evident in the research that I’ve personally done, that these nations have planned months and months ahead of time, drafted, and redrafted their conclusive statistical analyses of the percentages of natural earthly elements in their respective localities - which often vary according to season and temperature shifts - anyway, an additional recoding of the changing atmospherical weather patterns, and thoroughly descriptive and detailed interpretations of the mutual effect that humans and the Earth share with one another.
So. I have come up with several of my own resolutions that, I believe, could hold some type of influence within the innumerable avenues of discourse that the summit will most certainly have to endure and painstakingly answer. Many of my own are rough, so I hope to have these original solutions perfected and polished before I propose them on any social outlet.
So, do you have any climate change solutions of your own?? Certainly a broad inquiry, but one that could help change the world. And with this brief, little, teeny-tiny page I wrote on this matter, I hope that I provided an adequate introduction to the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP21/CMP11) and encouraged another’s own sense of duty to save our planet, mitigate the effects of climate change, and reverse the downhill course of global warming.
My only sweet sources:
http://www.green-alliance.org.uk/resources/Paris%202015-getting%20a%20global%20agreement%20on%20climate%20change.pdf
http://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en
My only sweet sources:
http://www.green-alliance.org.uk/resources/Paris%202015-getting%20a%20global%20agreement%20on%20climate%20change.pdf
http://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en
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