It was practically all countries as the number of participating states was 193. As of Jan 10, 2010, only 28 states have, however, signed the resulting Copenhagen accord. The process of getting more to sign in ongoing.
196 countries participated in the Copenhagen United Nations Climate Change Conference in 2009.
One hundred and ninety seven (197) countries are in the Paris Climate Agreement.105 countries have ratified the agreement (November 2016)
192 countries - the same amount that have ratified the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
The conference for climate change, also known as the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP), is held in various countries around the world. It is an annual event where global leaders, policymakers, and stakeholders come together to discuss and negotiate actions to address climate change.
Climate change conference allow countries to come together to learn, discuss and share. They can then determine if their goals are going to make a difference to Climate change. The Paris Agreement of 2015 is a good example of this.
In Kyoto, on the island of Honshū, Japan, countries met in December 1997 to establish an agreement to limit the amounts of greenhouse gas emissions. This agreement is known as the Kyoto Protocol.
The 2009 UN climate change conference was hosted in Copenhagen, Denmark.
195 countries plus the European Union took part in the Conference.186 countries submitted their promised targets (INDCs) by the end of the Conference and the remaining nine can still submit their pledges.There will be a Signing Ceremony at the United Nations, New York, on 22 April, 2016 and the Agreement will be open for further signing till 21 April 2017.
The climate change conference is currently taking place in Glasgow, Scotland. It is officially known as the 26th Conference of the Parties, or COP26, under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
The Climate Change Conference is held every year and usually in a different place. In 2012 it was in Doha in Qatar. In 2011 it was in Durban in South Africa.
Key elements of the Copenhagen Accord include: an aspirational goal of limiting global temperature increase to 2 degrees Celsius; a process for countries to enter their specific mitigation pledges by January 31, 2010; broad terms for the reporting and verification of countries' actions; a collective commitment by developed countries for $30 billion in "new and additional" resources in 2010-2012 to help developing countries reduce emissions, preserve forests, and adapt to climate change; and a goal of mobilizing $100 billion a year in public and private finance by 2020 to address developing county needs.
The UN Copenhagen conference on climate change, also known as COP15, took place in 2009. The conference aimed to negotiate a global agreement to address climate change post-2012 when the Kyoto Protocol's commitments were set to expire. While the conference did not result in a binding agreement, it did lead to the Copenhagen Accord, a non-legally binding document outlining commitments from major emitters and financial support for developing countries to address climate change.