Seminar paper from the year 2010 in the subject Politics - Environmental Policy grade: 13 University of Mannheim language: English abstract: Not just since the failure of COP-15 in Copenhagen in December 2009 we know that dealing with climate change its reasons and its consequences is anything but easy. Climate protection is a small part of a wider image: The fight of humankind against any form of environmental degradation. No matter if it concerns the hole in the ozone layer forest decline caused by acid rain or the distinction of species firm action is required. Climate falls in the same category but moreover it is much more difficult to handle: As a common good climate affects every state on earth equal if it is being destroyed or protected. Moreover at first glance investments in climate protection seem to be curtailments in economic development and only having effects in the far future. Hence we can consider climate politics on national and especially on international level as a hot subject where failures are easy and successes are rare but where action is required. We target to investigate if the United Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC) and the subsequent Kyoto Protocol (KP) compose an international regime on climate change and how well various international relations approaches are able to explain the actual outcome. In the first part we start with the question: How do we know a regime when we see one? Subsequently we depict the road to the adoption of the FCCC and the KP respectively. Finally we present different approaches in explaining the formation of regimes and use them to determine their predictive efficiency by applying them to our case study.