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UN climate
talks to drop 2020 goals
NUSA DUA (Indonesia)—The United States urged a U.N. climate meeting on
Monday to drop a 2020 target for deep cuts in greenhouse gases by rich
nations from guidelines for a new pact to slow global warming beyond
2012.
“It’s prejudging what the outcome should be,” chief U.S. negotiator
Harlan Watson said of a draft text suggesting that developed nations
should aim to axe emissions of heat-trapping gases by between 25 and 40
percent below 1990 levels by 2020. The United Nations wants the December
3-14 talks in Bali, gathering more than 10,000 participants, to agree to
launch negotiations on a new global climate treaty to be adopted at a
U.N. meeting in Copenhagen at the end of 2009.
“We don’t want to start out with numbers,” Watson told a news conference
of the hunt for a new pact to fight rising temperatures that could bring
more floods, droughts, melt Himalayan glaciers and raise sea levels. A
new pact would widen the U.N.’s Kyoto Protocol, which binds 36
industrial nations to cut emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels,
by 5 percent below 1990 by 2008-12. The United States has rejected Kyoto
and developing nations in the pact, such as China and India, have no
2008-12 targets. Delegates said Washington and Tokyo argued strongly in
meetings on Monday against mention of a range for long-term emissions
cuts in a draft text, which lays out the guidelines for any future
negotiations.
The draft also refers to scientific evidence that world emissions will
have to be cut by at least 50 percent below 2000 levels by 2050 to avert
the worst impacts of global warming. Poor nations want the rich to
commit to the deepest cuts. “The numbers are still in the text. There
has been a lot of pressure to take them out,” one delegate with intimate
knowledge of the draft negotiations said. He corrected a statement
earlier in the day that they had been cut out. A total of 176 countries
that have ratified the Kyoto Protocol agreed in August to the 25-40
percent goal as a non-binding guide for developed nations. “This is
unacceptable,” Hans Verolme of the WWF environmental group said of
efforts to cut out goals.
He noted that the U.N. Climate Panel — on whose work the 25-40 percent
range was based — collected the Nobel Peace Prize on Monday in Oslo.
“Our opinion about Kyoto has not changed,” Watson said. President George
W. Bush opposes Kyoto, saying it would damage the U.S. economy and
wrongly excludes 2008-2012 goals for developing nations, such as China,
India and Brazil. Bush says the United States will join a new global
pact. And in Oslo, former U.S. Vice President Al Gore — defeated by Bush
for the presidency in the narrow 2000 election — said it was time to
stop waging war on the earth and make peace with the planet. He also
said the 2008 election campaign was not focusing enough on
climate.—Agencies
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