“…It extends the FCCC efforts to respond to the threat of climate change by setting internationally binding emission reduction targets that aim to force countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions sufficiently to keep global warming this century beneath 2 • C above pre-industrial levels, with an aspirational target of 1.5 • C. As at October 2017, 169 of 197 parties to the FCCC have ratified the Agreement, although on 1 June 2017, one of the ratifying countries, the United States, declared its intention to withdraw from the Agreement (Ironically, the 2 • C target was initially proposed by an economist, William D. Nordhaus, in a series of papers in the 1970s, and based on the amount of global warming experienced since pre-industrial times; see, for example, [1]. The likelihood of achieving the Paris Agreement objective in this century is viewed skeptically by [2], and the sensitivity of the likelihood of achieving the objective to the definition of "pre-industrial" is explored by [3] (For a brief history of the international response to climate change see http://unfccc.int/essential_background/items/6031.php. A list of parties to the FCCC, and their ratification status, is available at http://unfccc.int/paris_agreement/items/9444.php).…”