Photo AI

Last Updated Sep 26, 2025

The creation, role and significance of the IPCC Simplified Revision Notes

Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand The creation, role and significance of the IPCC quickly and effectively.

user avatar
user avatar
user avatar
user avatar
user avatar

441+ students studying

28.1.1 The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

The UNFCCC - The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change

  • Founded at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit
  • A framework for negotiations - under which states can work towards international agreements and operate under the guidance and support of the UN.
  • 197 states have signed up to the UNFCCC and signatories are classified according to their level of economic development.
  • Conferences of the Parties (COPs) are annual summits to take forward climate change. There have been 24 summits since 1995.
  • UNFCC hears from NGOs and other influences e.g., David Attenborough.

States commit to:

  • Agree to act and safeguard human security, even in the face of scientific uncertainty.
  • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Developed states are asked to act more as they are the source of past and current emissions.
  • Developed states should help developing states with their financial needs to achieve goals.
  • States should report on their progress.

The IPCC - The Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change

infoNote
  • In the 70s/80s, scientific evidence at an early/undeveloped stage was taking place at an individual state. Further investigations needed funding and knowledge to be pooled and therefore maximized.
  • In 1988, the IPCC was set up to address the gap and provide the base for research.

The aims of the IPCC:

  • Regular assessments of the impact and extent of climate change.
  • Regular assessments and the causes of risks of climate change.
  • Solutions to reduce the impact or manage climate change effects.
  • Climate change is a collective action problem and therefore collective research was needed.
  • The IPCC advises governments but cannot force them to act on advice.
  • Hundreds of scientists from different states involved.
  • Aims to be a credible, trusted, and neutral evidence base.
  • Removes the politics or state interest from science and it is internationalized.

Environment Summits

The aim of the summits is to:

infoNote
  • Identify and agree on the problem and the need for collective action (Stockholm 1972 and Rio 1992) supported by international frameworks (UNFCCC and IPCC).
  • Agree on specific action that can be taken:
    • Kyoto (1997)
    • Copenhagen (2009)
    • Paris (2015)
    • Katowice (2018)
    • UK (2021)

Stockholm 1972 - UN Conference on the Human Environment

  • Looking at scientific evidence at a very early stage.

  • No international law or binding commitments.

  • Science and politics were still working separately (no IPCC).

  • Aims were more independent than collective. Key principles agreed:

  • Safeguarding natural resources.

  • Pollution must not exceed the capacity of the environment to clean itself.

  • Developing countries need financial assistance to develop environmental safeguards.

  • Each nation must establish its own standards.

Montreal Protocol 1989

infoNote
  • The first example of a global environmental governance treaty.
  • The precautionary principle: agree to take action even if science is unclear.
  • Non-CO2 emissions - banning of carbon fibre composites.
  • Five to six times the impact of the Kyoto Protocol.
  • Measures were far less costly to states' economic interests - felt as though they were sharing the equal burden of climate change.
  • 197 states ratified the protocol.

Rio Earth Summit 1992

infoNote
  • A 2-week meeting where 172 states were represented.
  • They agreed to look at a future framework of action - founded the UNFCC.
  • Locked states into progress for annual negotiations.
  • The international community mutually agreed that this problem requires collective action. Although no specific ideas/policies were created, this was still a success.

Kyoto COP 1997

infoNote
  • It put key focus on specific actions rather than principles or frameworks.
  • It created legally binding targets to reduce emissions but only for developed states.
  • The protocol would come into force when at least 55% of the world's carbon emissions and 55 states had ratified - needed this critical mass.
  • Introduced a carbon credit scheme which came into force in 2005 with an expiry date of 2012.
  • Brazil, China, India, and South America were all exempt, although this did not resolve the developed/developing world clash.
  • Industrialized states were committed to reducing emissions of greenhouse gases by around 5% between 2008 - 2012.
  • President Bush withdrew from the protocol in 2001. Russia and China also did not collaborate, making the protocol ineffective as the US, Russia, and China are the world's largest polluters. In the treaty's lifetime, China's fossil fuel emissions have increased by 300%, showing their dismissal.

Copenhagen COP 2009

infoNote
  • With Kyoto expiring and incomplete, there was considerable pressure on the parties to reach a climate change agreement.
  • Obama had been recently elected so there were high hopes - there was a hope for collective action, particularly from the US but also from Russia and China.
  • The conference agreed to limit temperature rises to 2°C.
  • There was a method agreed upon for verifying emission reductions.
  • No legally binding targets were agreed and not even the agreement was legally binding - a key fault as it doesn't carry the weight of international law.
  • One of the largest successes was getting China and India to agree on reducing carbon emissions for the first time (even if not legally binding).
  • There was the emergence of the negotiating blocs - G7 and BASIC (Brazil, South Africa, India, and China) groups. BASIC states reached the initial agreement, including the 2-degree temperature rise limit.
  • Divisions between the developed and developing world remained.

Paris COP 2015

infoNote

Arguably the most effective and influential of all.

  • A key objective was to create legally binding targets and they achieved it in ALL states.
  • States set their domestic targets (intended nationally determined contributions).
  • An agreement to keep global temperature increase 'well below' 2°C and to pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5°C and to collectively review progress every 5 years.
  • $100 billion fund to help developing states respond to climate change.
  • Ambitious targets set by individual states:
  • India - 35% reduction by 2030.
  • US - 28% reduction by 2025 (Trump withdrew in 2017).
  • China - 60-65% by 2030.
  • The protocol came into force in Nov 2016.

Katowice COP 2018

infoNote
  • Agreed on a common rule book to make the Paris agreement operational in 2020.
  • The rules and means of monitoring are by INDC's - submissions of research.
  • 196 states agreed.
  • The US, Russia, and Saudi Arabia blocked a resolution which welcomed the IPCC's most recent report.

UK COP26 2021

4 key achievements:

  1. Progress on adaptation to climate change which is now deemed equally as important as reducing emissions - helping to address the impacts of climate change already happening - technical support for countries to address loss and damage related to climate change to strengthen resilience.
  2. Governments agreed much greater financial support was needed for developing countries - the most vulnerable cannot be ignored and more finance for adaptation is needed. Developed countries had yet to live up to the $100 billion annual pledge at Paris COP 2015.
  3. Collective agreement by governments to explore ways to increase actions to reduce emissions - acceleration of renewable deployment.
  4. Finalisation of guidelines for implementation of the Paris Agreement.
infoNote

The UN chief pointed out that despite accomplishments at UK COP, the world is still far off meeting the goal of 1.5°C stable temperature rise and urged further and immediate international collaboration to get the world back on track to achieving this goal.

Are Global Climate Change Summits Making Progress?

YesNo
The gap between developing and developed states is being bridged and therefore cooperation is becoming more feasible.No real change has been achieved and in fact climate conditions are worsening e.g., increasing sea levels.
Politics is rushing to keep up with the science but cannot.Emissions are still increasing as there is no sustainable alternative as good as what we have.
The creation of the IPCC allows unbiased scientific research which is respected and indicates the strong need for change.Developing countries rely on their industry for their economy and are not yet willing to sacrifice that to better the climate.
They provide a space for nations to cooperate and come up with a united approach which will be much more beneficial in the long term.Legally binding targets cannot be enforced and are ignored by many states e.g., Russia vetoing the IPCC report to hide their emissions.
Increase in legally binding targets which has encouraged greater participation from key polluters e.g., Russia and China.USA pulled out of the Paris Agreement in 2017 when Trump launched his 'America First' policy, claiming the Paris agreement would cost the USA $3 trillion and 6.5 million jobs.
Books

Only available for registered users.

Sign up now to view the full note, or log in if you already have an account!

500K+ Students Use These Powerful Tools to Master The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

Enhance your understanding with flashcards, quizzes, and exams—designed to help you grasp key concepts, reinforce learning, and master any topic with confidence!

20 flashcards

Flashcards on The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

Revise key concepts with interactive flashcards.

Try Politics Flashcards

2 quizzes

Quizzes on The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

Test your knowledge with fun and engaging quizzes.

Try Politics Quizzes

29 questions

Exam questions on The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

Boost your confidence with real exam questions.

Try Politics Questions

27 exams created

Exam Builder on The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

Create custom exams across topics for better practice!

Try Politics exam builder

16 papers

Past Papers on The creation, role and significance of the IPCC

Practice past papers to reinforce exam experience.

Try Politics Past Papers

Other Revision Notes related to The creation, role and significance of the IPCC you should explore

Discover More Revision Notes Related to The creation, role and significance of the IPCC to Deepen Your Understanding and Improve Your Mastery

Load more notes

Join 500,000+ A-Level students using SimpleStudy...

Join Thousands of A-Level Students Using SimpleStudy to Learn Smarter, Stay Organized, and Boost Their Grades with Confidence!

97% of Students

Report Improved Results

98% of Students

Recommend to friends

500,000+

Students Supported

50 Million+

Questions answered