Tag cloud | Greenpeace studies (13)added 14 December, 2009 « According to Greenpeace, HFCs must be phased out by 2020.The phase-out must be coordinated between the UNFCCC and the Montreal Protocol. HFC emissions should remain the responsibility of the UNFCCC. The Montreal Protocol will implement the phase-o... » added 26 October, 2009 « Greenpeace has four main arguments against HFOs, the fourth generation of F-gases: 1.HFOs present an unnecessary risk to the environment and human health 2.HFOs are only a short-term fix 3.Natural refrigerants are the best available technology and... » added 8 October, 2009 « This document outlines Greenpeace's demands for the international regulation of HFCs, as it believes that none of current proposals as of October 2009 are ambitious enough. » added 18 September, 2009 « Brussels, 10 September 2009 - The European Commission has taken a small step on the road to Copenhagen by for the first time proposing concrete funding for climate action in the developing world. But Greenpeace warns that the proposed figure... » added 18 September, 2009 « Media briefing on the European Commission’s communication on climate finance & what’s next in the countdown to Copenhagen » added 15 July, 2009 « The following sampling of companies and enterprises using HFC-free technologies is provided to demonstrate that there is already a wide array of safe and commercially proven HFC-free technologies available to meet those human needs that were forme... » added 10 July, 2009 « F-gases include CFCs, HCFCs, HFCs, PFCs and SF6. Three of these, chlorofluorocarbons, hydrochlorofluorocarbons and hydrofluorocarbons are widely used around the world in refrigeration and air-conditioning, as refrigerants and as insulation foam bl... » added 9 June, 2009 « The following text serves as a proposal and vision for the Copenhagen Agreement, it is put forward for the purpose of providing a holistic and coherent model treaty but also for initiating discussion. » added 9 June, 2009 « This document contains a draft version of how the agreement in copenhagen could look like – in legal form. This is very much a work in progress. » added 9 May, 2009 « As the reality of climate change continues to outstrip research findings, it is becoming clear that reaching the 'tipping point' is a far more immediate threat than we imagined and the window of opportunity for avoiding runaway climate change is ... » | |