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APEC deal
unlikely on climate change targets
Foreign Desk Report
SYDNEY—Asia-Pacific countries will not agree on binding targets for the
reduction of greenhouse gas emissions at a major summit this week,
Australian Prime Minister John Howard said Sunday.
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum — which includes the
world’s biggest polluters, the United States and China — will outline
tactics for the post-Kyoto fight against climate change at the September
8-9 summit.
Howard, who had said the issue would top the APEC agenda in Sydney, was
forced to go on the defensive after a leaked draft of a declaration by
leaders of the forum’s 21 member economies revealed no targets would be
agreed.
“We must be realistic about what can be achieved on climate change. We
won’t reach agreement, nor do we imagine for a moment that we could
reach agreement, on binding targets amongst the member countries of APEC,”
he told reporters.
The main international treaty on climate change, the Kyoto Protocol,
expires in 2012 and the APEC summit is one of a series of meetings at
which plans for a post-Kyoto agreement are being discussed. But the
leaked draft declaration has already been dismissed by experts and
activists as mere hot air.
The draft says APEC members “agree that a long-term aspirational global
emissions reduction goal will be a key component of the post-2012
framework,” but sets no enforceable targets. Greenpeace, which posted
the draft on its website, said it did not go far enough.
“In 1995 the world community agreed that voluntary, aspirational targets
were ineffective and, as such, negotiated the Kyoto Protocol which
includes binding emission reduction commitments,” the environmental
watchdog said. “To return to aspirational targets would throw away 12
years of progress.”
Howard said any APEC framework agreement on a post-Kyoto approach had to
be based on the fact that each member economy had different needs. “We
do not believe that continuing down the Kyoto path is going to provide a
solution to the problem,” he told a news conference.
“What I would like to see the APEC meeting in Sydney do is develop a
consensus on a post-Kyoto international framework that attracts
participation by all emitters. “And if we just have a singular focus at
this meeting — as some are naively urging — on binding targets, that
will just postpone the development of that agreement by years.”
Australia and the United States are the only two countries in the world
to have refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, complaining that it could
hurt their economies. The APEC meeting is just one of three
international conferences this month that will tackle a problem which
scientists warn could lead to increasingly dangerous storms, heatwaves,
floods, droughts and rising sea levels.
It will be followed in two weeks by a special UN meeting called by
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and a few days after that by a conference
in Washington called by President George W. Bush.
Bush has invited 15 nations and the European Union, which together
account for 80 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, to set long-term
goals on cutting outputs. In December, the parties to the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (FCCC) and the Kyoto Protocol will meet on
the Indonesian resort island of Bali to plan strategies for the
post-Kyoto world.
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