According to Project Developer Forum, the 29,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide is roughly equivalent to the emissions produced by the entire Pacific island state of Kiribati in six months.
Benny Peiser, of the climate-sceptic Global Warming Policy Foundation described the 12-day climate summit in the Peruvian capital as the "green blob's annual ritual" and "an expensive form of mass tourism, never mind the carbon footprint".
"The developing world will ask for a high price which will sink the deal in the US." He said he believed any deal would not be legally-binding and that this would lead the EU to renege on its own carbon-cutting pledges.
"In short, the deal that is now in the making won't slow CO2 emissions and won't bind any nation. But it will be sold as a breakthrough - as all agreements have been sold in the past," he was quoted as saying by The Telegraph.
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