Preceding with a stride ahead towards carbon-emission journey it’s the fourth day here, of the conference in Copenhagen. Legal binding agreements and profound emission- lessening programs were the hot discussion topics. The division line between the developing nations and developed ones are widening as U.S delivers harsh talks to developing country specifically to China emphasizing on cutting down emissions. The debate is the clear display to us how difficult it is for 190 nations to settle down among each other at the conference.
As the U.S. asks developing countries to “envelop” their national emission reduction, India said it would not accept any internationally binding agreement and its emissions reductions were not up for “review, verification, re-negotiation or dialogue,” reports the Business Standard.
Disagreements among developing countries is being led by the Pacific Island of Tuvalu, in addition to the gap between wealthy and developing nations, which is proposing a new treaty that would keep the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees C, reports The Age. This can be accepted by most of the nations to curb Global warming.







