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<br />RESOLUTION <br /> <br />WHEREAS, the Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the international community's most <br />respected assemblage of scientists, is clear that there is no longer any credible doubt that climate disruption is a <br />reality and human activities are largely responsible for increasing concentrations of global warming pollution; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, recent, well-documented impacts of climate disruption include average global sea level increases of <br />four to eight inches during the 20th century; a 40% decline in Arctic sea-ice thickness; and nine of the ten hottest <br />years on record occurring in the past decade; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, climate disruption of the magnitude now predicted by the scientific community will cause extremely <br />costly disruption of human and natural systems throughout the world including: increased risk of floods or droughts; <br />sea-level rises that interact with coastal storms to erode beaches, inundate land, and damage structures; more <br />frequent and extreme heat waves, more frequent and greater concentrations of smog; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, on February 16,2005, the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement to address climate disruption, <br />entered into force in the 141 countries that have ratified it to date; 38 of those countries are now legally required to <br />reduce greenhouse gas emissions on average 5.2 percent below 1990 levels by 2012; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, the United States of America, with less than five percent of the world's population, is responsible for <br />producing approximately 25% of the world's global warming pollutants yet is not a party to the Kyoto Protocol; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, the Kyoto Protocol emissions reduction target for the U.S., had it ratified the treaty, would have been <br />7% below 1990 levels by 2012; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, many leading US companies that have adopted greenhouse gas reduction programs to demonstrate <br />corporate social responsibility have also publicly expressed preference for the US to adopt precise and mandatory <br />emissions targets and timetables as a means by which to remain competitive in the international marketplace, to <br />mitigate financial risk and to promote sound investment decisions; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, state and local governments throughout the United States are adopting emission reduction targets and <br />programs and that this leadership is bipartisan; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, many cities throughout the nation, both large and small, are reducing global warming pollutants <br />through programs that provide economic and quality of life benefits such as reduced energy bills, green space <br />preservation, air quality improvements, reduced traffic congestion, improved transportation choices, and economic <br />development and job creation through energy conservation and new energy technologies; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, mayors from around the nation have signed the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement which <br />reads: <br /> <br />/ <br />) <br />