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APEC rift
opens over climate change debate
Foreign Desk Report
SYDNEY—Leaders at an Asia-Pacific summit appeared deadlocked on Thursday
over what their “Sydney Declaration” on climate change and cutting
greenhouse gas emissions should say.
China’s President Hu Jintao gave only qualified support to Australia’s
initiative on climate change, while some developing nations criticized
Australian and U.S. moves to put climate change at the top of the agenda
of the APEC gathering in Sydney.
President George W. Bush raised climate change with Hu during a
bilateral in Sydney and said he would support a strong climate statement
by the 21 leaders and urged Hu to do the same.
“They concluded the importance of addressing this pressing problem
cooperatively and responsibly ... and in a manner that did not stall or
stunt economic growth,” said Dan Price, Bush’s deputy national security
adviser for international economic development.
Bush indicated the U.S. would support a “strong leaders’ declaration on
climate change” and encouraged the Chinese leader to do likewise, as
well as consider eliminating tariffs on environmental and clean energy
technologies, said Price. In a rare news conference after meeting
Australian Prime Minister John Howard, Hu said he preferred the U.N.
framework for handling climate change proposals. “We very much hope that
this Sydney Declaration will give full expression to the position that
the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change would remain the main
channel for international efforts to tackle climate change,” Hu said.
The declaration should also reflect U.N. principles of “common but
differentiated responsibilities” towards lowering harmful greenhouse gas
emissions, he added. Malaysia Trade Minister Rafidah Aziz said APEC
should not be dealing with emission targets at all. “It should be the
U.N. and the appropriate forums,” she told Malaysian journalists.
Ministers from the Philippines and Indonesia have also questioned the
approach. A major meeting of top officials from around the world under
the U.N. framework is set for Indonesia’s Bali in December. Governments
hope environment ministers will launch a two-year series of talks to
find a replacement for the Kyoto agreement. Australia, as host of the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, has put climate change at the
top of the agenda.
Its draft declaration calls for a new global framework that would
include “aspirational” targets on lowering greenhouse gas emissions,
which scientists say is causing the climate to change.
Australia, backed by the United States, says the Kyoto Protocol is
flawed because it does not commit big polluters in the developing world,
such as India and China, to the same kind of targets as industrialized
nations.
Kyoto’s first phase runs out in 2012 and the APEC summit is one of a
growing number of efforts to find a formula that brings rich and
developing countries together on climate change.
Trade was also a major topic at APEC on Thursday, with China calling on
developed members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) to be more
flexible in talks that have dragged on for six years but which many hope
will enter their final phase this year.
“We must say no to trade protectionism, eliminate trade barriers and
move the Doha Round negotiation towards a comprehensive and balanced
outcome at an early date,” Hu said. The talks which started in 2001 in
the city of Doha have been bogged down by deep divisions over farm
subsidies, tariffs and a host of other issues.
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