WHEN: Tuesday, February 14th at 6:00 pm WHERE: Steele Hall 007 (on College Street across from Dartmouth's Baker-Berry Library Complex) WHAT: Michael Dorsey, Jim Rubens, John Topping: "The Kyoto Process after Durban" Dr. Michael Dorsey is assistant professor in Dartmouth College's Environmental Studies Program and the Director of the College's Climate Justice Research Project. His research is focuses on the intersections of climate change policy, finance and social justice. In 2010 Lisa Jackson, the US Environmental Protection Agency (US-EPA) Administrator, appointed Dorsey to the EPA's National Advisory Committee. Michael has followed closely the climate change negotiations from the Rio Treaty through the Kyoto Protocol to the most recent negotiations in Durban, South Africa. He was present in Durban for the most recent round of talks and will provide us with his insights on and critical analysis of the process, results from Durban, and prospects and alternative scenarios for the future. BACKGROUND: In June 1992 the Earth Summit was held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. That gathering produced the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the international environmental treaty that President George Bush Sr. signed and the US Senate subsequently ratified. Under that convention, the UNFCCC signatories met in 1997 in Kyoto, Japan and developed the Kyoto Protocol signed by President Bill Clinton in 1998 but never ratified by the US Senate. The Kyoto Protocol established categories of targets for reductions of greenhouse gas emission by the parties to the protocol; those targets were to be reached by the end of 2012. The Kyoto process has seen other meetings and negotiating sessions in Montreal, Copenhagen, and other sites most recently late last year in Durban, South Africa. Professor Michael Dorsey of Dartmouth's Environmental Studies Program, has followed the climate change negotiations closely from the Rio Treaty through the Kyoto Protocol to the most recent negotiations in Durban. He was, indeed, at the Rio conference in 1992, and present in Durban for this latest round of talks. This evening Dr. Dorsey will provide us with his insights on and critical analysis of the process, emphasizing results from Durban, and prospects for future alternative scenarios. Dr. Dorsey has invited two distinguished individuals to join him and share their own views on the issues of climate change, and strategies to address same. Jim Rubens and John Topping both have ties to Dartmouth College Jim Rubens is a successful businessman, a former Senator in the NH Legislature, author, and now a consultant with the Union of Concerned Scientists. John Topping has been President and CEO of the Washington, DC-based Climate Institute since its founding in 1986. John has served in the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and as editor of portions of the First Assessment Report of the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).