Escazu Agreement
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Escazu Agreement
Summary
Escazu Agreement is a treaty[1]. It draws 101 Wikipedia views per month (treaty category, ranking #176 of 1,157).[2]
Key Facts
- Escazu Agreement's instance of is recorded as treaty[3].
- Escazú is named after Escazu Agreement[4].
- Escazu Agreement took place at Escazú Canton[5].
- Escazu Agreement's Commons category is recorded as Acuerdo de Escazú[6].
- Escazu Agreement occurred on March 4, 2018[7].
- Escazu Agreement's work available at URL is recorded as https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/No%20Volume/56654/Part/I-56654-08000002804f8b26.pdf[8].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Antigua and Barbuda[9].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Argentina[10].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Brazil[11].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Costa Rica[12].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Ecuador[13].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Guatemala[14].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Guyana[15].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Haiti[16].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Mexico[17].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Panama[18].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Peru[19].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Dominican Republic[20].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Saint Lucia[21].
- Escazu Agreement's signatory is recorded as Uruguay[22].
- Escazu Agreement's depositary is recorded as United Nations Secretary-General[23].
- Escazu Agreement's operating area is recorded as Latin America and the Caribbean[24].
- Escazu Agreement's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Climate change[25].
Why It Matters
Escazu Agreement draws 101 Wikipedia views per month (treaty category, ranking #176 of 1,157).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]