Global Warming: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Energy and Power of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, Second Session, on the Role of the U.S. Government in the United Nations Negotiations on Global Warming Climate Change, March 3, 1992, Volume 4U.S. Government Printing Office, 1992 - 192 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page 4
... continue to strive for the best outcome and I congratulate you on your recent progress . Thank you Mr. Chairman . Mr. SHARP . So we now welcome our first panel of witnesses from the executive branch . We are pleased to have back with us ...
... continue to strive for the best outcome and I congratulate you on your recent progress . Thank you Mr. Chairman . Mr. SHARP . So we now welcome our first panel of witnesses from the executive branch . We are pleased to have back with us ...
Page 5
... continuing to look for additional measures that make sense , and we are in the process of trying to quantify the effects of the measures we have already identified in terms of reductions in net greenhouse gas emissions . Parallel to the ...
... continuing to look for additional measures that make sense , and we are in the process of trying to quantify the effects of the measures we have already identified in terms of reductions in net greenhouse gas emissions . Parallel to the ...
Page 7
... continue to support the negotiations with the hope that a convention can be adopted in time for it to be opened for signature during the U.N. Conference on Environment and Development , which will take place in Brazil this coming June ...
... continue to support the negotiations with the hope that a convention can be adopted in time for it to be opened for signature during the U.N. Conference on Environment and Development , which will take place in Brazil this coming June ...
Page 8
... of the World Bank to serve as the financial mechanism for the convention to assist Parties in meeting agreed incremental costs associated with implementing the Convention . - 3 On Technology , developing countries continue to insist 8.
... of the World Bank to serve as the financial mechanism for the convention to assist Parties in meeting agreed incremental costs associated with implementing the Convention . - 3 On Technology , developing countries continue to insist 8.
Page 9
... continue to insist on preferential , non - commercial access to technology transfer , while industrialized countries support a cooperative approach in which governments would facilitate the commercial process by which most transfer of ...
... continue to insist on preferential , non - commercial access to technology transfer , while industrialized countries support a cooperative approach in which governments would facilitate the commercial process by which most transfer of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieve actions Administration adopt agreed Annex areas assessment atmosphere Baroody carbon dioxide emissions carbon tax Chairman CO₂ CO2 emissions coal commitments Committee competitiveness Conference conservation Convention cost developing country Parties effects efforts Electric emissions of greenhouse emissions reductions energy efficiency Environment environmental estimated financial resources fossil fuels funding gases global climate change Global Climate Coalition Global Environment Facility global warming greenhouse gas emissions growth GRUENSPECHT impacts implementation improvement increase industrialized countries Intergovernmental International Trade Administration investments IPCC Lashof levels measures meeting methane mitigate Montreal Protocol National Energy Strategy natural gas NEESPLAN negotiations OECD OECD countries offsets options programs projects promote proposed Protocol reduce greenhouse gas regional economic integration REINSTEIN response scenario scientific sea level rise secretariat stabilize sulfur dioxide SYNAR technology cooperation Telephone tions trade treaty U.S. industry United utilities