EU Accuses US of Blocking Climate Talks
INDONESIA: December 14, 2007
NUSA DUA, Indonesia - The European Union accused the United States on
Thursday of blocking goals for fighting climate change at UN talks in Bali
and threatened to boycott US talks among top greenhouse gas emitting
nations.
The Dec. 3-14 Bali talks are split over the guidelines for starting two
years of formal negotiations on a deal to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, a UN
pact capping greenhouse gas emissions of all industrial nations except the
United States until 2012.
"If we would have a failure in Bali it would be meaningless to have a major
economies' meeting" in the United States, Humberto Rosa, Portugal's
Secretary of State for Environment, said on the penultimate day of the
talks.
"We're not blackmailing," he said, escalating ratcheting up a war of words
with Washington at the 190-nation meeting. "If no Bali, no MEM (major
economies' meeting)."
Portugal holds the rotating EU presidency and Rosa is the EU's top
negotiator in Bali, where delegates are seeking to agree to launch talks on
a broad new climate treaty to combat floods, droughts, heatwaves and rising
seas from 2012.
"We don't feel that comments like that are very constructive when we are
working so hard to find common ground," said Kristin Hellmer, a White House
spokeswoman in Bali.
Washington, long at odds with many of its Western allies on climate
policies, has called a meeting of 17 of the world's top emitters, including
China, Russia and India, in Hawaii late next month to discuss long-term
curbs on greenhouse gases.
President George W. Bush intends the Honolulu meeting as part of a series to
come up with plans for curbs to feed into the UN process, to be completed
after he steps down in January 2009. Washington hosted a similar meeting in
September.
The EU wants Bali's final text to agree a non-binding goal of cuts in
emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels, of 25 to 40 percent below 1990
levels by 2020 for industrial economies. The United States, Japan and Canada
are opposed, saying any figures would prejudge the outcome.
BLOCKING
"Those who are suggesting that you can magically find agreement on a metric
when you are just starting negotiations, that in itself is a blocking
element," said James Connaughton, Chairman of the White House Council on
Environmental Quality.
Despite opposition to Kyoto, the United States plans to join a new treaty,
meant to be agreed in Copenhagen in late 2009 with participation of
developing nations led by China and India.
Washington submitted a new text to the talks around midnight on Thursday
that stressed voluntary goals for greenhouse gases rather than binding
Kyoto-style caps for developed countries.
"This is almost a caricature of the US position," James Leape, director
general of the WWF conservation group, told Reuters. "There needs to be a
cry of outrage from the other countries here."
Former US Vice President Al Gore, fresh from collecting the Nobel Peace
Prize in Oslo, won rapturous applause on the sidelines by adding his voice
to criticisms of Washington.
"My own country the United States is principally responsible for obstructing
progress in Bali," he said. Defeated by Bush in the 2000 election, he called
warming "a planetary emergency".
On other issues, the Bali talks made progress.
Negotiators agreed a deal in principle to share technology -- such as wind
turbines or solar panels -- to help poor nations. This week, the talks have
also agreed the workings of a fund to help poor nations adapt to climate
change and are hoping to take steps to slow deforestation.
Kyoto binds 37 industrialised nations to cut emissions by an average of 5
percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12. Poorer nations, led by China and
India, are exempt from curbs. Washington pulled out in 2001, saying Kyoto
would harm the US economy and wrongly excluded goals for developing
countries.
The United Nations says a Kyoto successor has to be in place by 2009 to give
governments time to ratify the new deal by the end of 2012 and to give
markets clear guidelines on how to make investments in clean energy
technology.
-- For Reuters latest environment blogs click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/
(Additional reporting Adhityani Arga and Emma Graham-Harrison in Bali;
Writing by Alister Doyle; Editing by David Fogarty and Alex Richardson)
Story by David Fogarty and Gerard Wynn
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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