Article 13: Role
and powers of the Conference of Parties/Meeting of Parties
The COP, which is the supreme body of the FCCC, will also serve as the Meeting of Parties
(MOP) of the Kyoto Protocol. Nations which have become parties to the FCCC but not yet
parties to KP can participate as observers in the MOP. Apart from undertaking decisions mandated to it by the KP, the MOP
will regularly review the implementation of the KP and take decisions to promote its
effective implementation. It will also assess the overall effects, in particular
environmental, economic and social effects, of the measures taken in pursuance of the KP
and the extent to which progress is being made to achieve the objective of the FCCC (for
details see the analysis of the preamble to the KP above). It will periodically examine
the obligations of parties (in other words, the adequacy of their commitments in the
light of new scientific and technical knowledge) and consider and adopt regular
reports on the implementation of the KP.
The MOP will also:
promote exchange of information on
measures adopted by parties to address climate change and its effects;
coordinate measures adopted by two or
more parties, at their request, to address climate and its effects;
develop and periodically refine
comparable methodologies for the effective implementation of the KP;
recommend any other matter necessary for
the implementation of the KP;
mobilise additional financial resources
as indicated in Article 11.2 of the KP;
establish subsidiary bodies as required;
seek the services of competent
international organisations, and intergovernmental bodies and NGOs, as necessary; and,
undertake all other steps as may be
required to implement the KP.
The first MOP will take place in
conjunction with the first CoP which meets after the KP has entered into force. Subsequent
ordinary sessions of the MOPs will take place every year and in conjunction with the
ordinary sessions of the CoPs.
Extraordinary sessions of the MOPs will be
held either if they have been decided by earlier MOPs or at the request of any party,
provided one-third or more parties agree within six months of the request being
communicated by the secretariat.
National or international, governmental or
non-governmental agencies can attend the MOP as observers provided they are qualified in
matters covered by the KP, they have informed the secretariat in advance, and their
presence has not been objected to by at least one-third of the parties present.
Article 14: Secretariat
The secretariat for the KP will be the same as the secretariat for the FCCC.
Article 15: Subsidiary Bodies
The subsidiary bodies, SUBSTA and SBI, set up by the FCCC will also serve as the
subsidiary bodies for the KP. The meetings of the subsidiary bodies to the KP will be held
in conjunction with the meetings of the subsidiary bodies of the FCCC.
Article 16: Multilateral
Consultative Process
The MOP will discuss, as soon as possible, whether the multilateral consultative process
referred to in Article 13 of the FCCC should be applied to the KP or not and, if it is to
be applied, what modifications are needed, if any. This article of the FCCC says that
CoP-I will consider the establishment of a multilateral consultative process, which will
be available to parties at their request, to resolve any questions regarding the
implementation of the FCCC.
Article 17: Emissions Trading
This article allows countries listed in Annex B to trade emissions in order to fulfil
their emissions reduction objectives.
But it states that Annex B countries cannot
meet their entire reduction objectives through emissions trading. Reductions achieved
through emissions trading would have to "supplemental to domestic actions".
The KP further leaves the task for defining
"the relevant principles, modalities, rules and guidelines, in particular for
verification, reporting and accountability of emissions trading" to the CoP of the
FCCC.
It is interesting that the task
of defining the principles of emissions trading has not been left to the MOP but the CoP.
This appears to be a deliberate decision to speed up the process and not wait for the MOP
which will meet after the KP has gone into force. If developing countries do not play
ball, then some countries could refuse to sign the KP and, thus, keep it from going into
force.
Article 18: Non-compliance
Important as procedures of trade/punitive action to be set.
The KP has not yet taken any decision on
non-compliance measures. It has left the entire matter to MOP-I which has been mandated to
"approve appropriate and effective procedures and mechanisms to determine and to
address cases of non-compliance with the provisions" of the KP. It will do this,
among other things, through the development of an indicative list of consequences, taking
into account the cause, type, degree and frequency of non-compliance.
The Article further states that any
procedures and mechanisms under this Article which result in "binding
consequences" will be adopted only by means of an amendment to the KP. The amendment
procedure has been spelt out in Article 20 of the KP.
It will be interesting to watch
the development of this Article as non-compliers in the case of the KP will be the most
powerful nations on Earth. Trade sanctions that have often been adopted as a measure
against non-compliers in other environmental treaties will be totally ineffective against
these economically powerful nations.
Article 19:
Settlement of Disputes
This article states that Article 14 of the FCCC will also apply to the settlement of
disputes under the KP.
Article 14 of the
FCCC provides the following:
When two or more parties have a dispute
over the interpretation of the FCCC or its application, they will settle the dispute
through negotiation or any other peaceful means of their choice.
Nations can deposit at any time a written
declaration that in case of a dispute with another party, which has accepted a similar
obligation, that it will accept the submission of any dispute to the International Court
of Justice and/or arbitration in accordance with procedures adopted by the CoP as soon as
practicable, in the form of an annex on arbitration. A party like the EU, that is, a
regional economic integration organisation, can also make a declaration to the effect that
it will accept arbitration under the procedures set up by the CoP.
A nations declaration will remain
in force until it expires in accordance with the term stated in it or until three months
after written notice of the revocation of the declaration has been deposited. But a new
declaration, a notice of revocation or the expiry of a declaration will not affect any
proceedings that are pending before the International Court of Justice or the arbitration
tribunal, unless the nations involved in the dispute agree otherwise.
If even after one year of the
notification of a dispute by one nation to another, the dispute has not been settled, any
nation which is a party to the dispute, can request conciliation. A conciliation
commission will be established which will have an equal number of members appointed by
each party to the dispute. The chairperson will be chosen by the members appointed.
Additional procedures for conciliation
can be adopted by the CoP in the form of an annex on conciliation.
The provisions of this Article of the
FCCC will apply to any related legal instrument that the CoP may adopt, like the KP.
Article 20: Amendments to the
protocol
Any party can propose an amendment to the KP and they can be adopted at any ordinary
session of the MOP. The party proposing the amendment must inform the secretariat six
months in advance of the MOP at which it is proposed to be adopted. The secretariat will
send the text of the proposed amendment to every party to the KP and every signatory of
the FCCC.
At the MOP, parties will make every effort
to adopt an amendment by consensus. But, as a last resort, the amendment can be adopted by
a three-fourths majority vote of the parties present and voting.
An amendment will go into force only on the
90th day after three-fourths of the parties to the KP has notified its acceptance. For any
other party it will enter into force on the 90th day of the receipt of its acceptance of
the notification.
Article 21: Procedures for
the amendments to annexes
Annexes are an integral part of the KP. Parties can propose new annexes or amendments to
existing annexes.
The procedure for the adoption of a new
annex or amendments to an existing annex will be the same as the adoption of an amendment
to the KP.
The new annex or an amendment to an
existing annex, except in the case of Annex A or B, will go into force for all parties to
the KP six months after the Depositary has notified all parties about its adoption, except
for those parties which have sent in writing their non-acceptance. But once these parties
withdraw their non-acceptance, it will enter into force for these parties from the 90th
day of the withdrawal.
But if a new annex or an amendment to an
existing annex involves an amendment to the KP, then the new annex or an amendment to an
existing annex will not go into force until the amendment to the KP goes into force.
The procedures for adoption and entry into
force of amendments to Annexes A and B will be same as those spelt out for amendments to
the KP. But in the case of an amendment to Annex B, the written consent of the nation
concerned will be necessary before it can be adopted.
Article 22: Voting process
Each party will have a right to vote. But in the case of a regional economic integration
organisation, it can cast votes equal to the number of its members which have become
parties to the KP. But it cannot cast its vote in case any member decides to cast its vote
or vice versa.
Article 23: Depositary of the
Protocol
The Secretary-General of the UN is the Depositary of the KP.
Article 24: Signatures and
ratification
The KP will be open for signatures from March 16, 1998 to March 15, 1999 and it will be
open for accession from March 16, 1999.
Regional economic integration organisations
can become a party to the KP without any of its member-states becoming a party to the KP.
It will then be bound by the obligations under this protocol. The organisation and its
member-states will decide on their respective responsibilities under this protocol. These
organisations will declare the extent of their competence with respect to the matters
governed by the protocol. If there are substantial modifications in the extent of their
competence, then the organisation will inform the Depositary accordingly which in turn
will inform all parties to the KP.
Article 25: Entry into force
The KP will enter into force when not less than 55 parties to the FCCC have signed and
ratified the KP, including a sufficient number of parties listed in Annex 1 of the FCCC
which account in total for at least 55 per cent of the total carbon dioxide emissions of
Annex I countries in 1990. The total carbon dioxide emissions will be calculated on the
basis of the national communications of Annex I countries which have been communicated on
or before the date of adoption of the KP.
With USA and Russia together accounting for
53.73 per cent of these emissions, the KP cannot go into force without these two nations
signing it.
In the case of nations or regional economic
integration organisations (REIOs) which ratify the KP after it has gone into force, it
will go into force for those entities on the 90th day following their notification.
Article 26: Reservations to
the Protocol
No reservations can be made to this protocol.
Article 27: Withdrawal from
the Protocol
Any party can withdraw from the KP at any date after the KP has been into force for three
years. The withdrawal will become effective one year after the withdrawal has been
notified or any later date specified in the withdrawal notice.
Article 28: Languages of the
Protocol
The protocol is available in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish.
A table of country emissions (with details of 1990 per
capita emissions) collated from various sources is available. Please contact neelam@cseindia.org for the file. |