World Climate Deal Faces Hurdles for '09 Deadline
NORWAY: October 5, 2007
OSLO - A growing sense of urgency is pushing world leaders to agree a new
treaty to fight climate change but the US presidential election might still
foil hopes of a deal by the end of 2009, experts told a Reuters summit.
Many countries, including the United States and its main industrial allies
in the Group of Eight, want a climate pact agreed by the end of 2009 to help
slow warming that may bring more floods, droughts, heatwaves and rising
seas.
"There is a sense of urgency," Yvo de Boer, head of the UN Climate Change
Secretariat, said of the mood among world leaders facing with mounting
evidence of global warming. But he said not all were ready to sign up to a
2009 deadline.
Investors want to know long-term rules as soon as possible to decide whether
there will be penalties on greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power
plants, for instance, or tax breaks for windmills.
The United Nations wants a deal in place by the end of 2009 to give three
years for ratification by national parliaments before the expiry of the
Kyoto Protocol, the main UN plan for fighting global warming until 2012.
Many experts told a Reuters Environment Summit this week that 2009 was
possible but talks would slip because of factors including the US
presidential election in 2008 and the complexity of dividing curbs between
rich and poor.
"There's every reason to believe in the possibility" of a deal by the end of
2009, said Achim Steiner, head of the UN Environment Programme.
"A lot will hinge on essentially what happens in the United States, and
there we have every reason to believe that the position of he United States
over the next few years will not be the same as it was," he said.
President George W. Bush decided in 2001 against implementing the UN's Kyoto
Protocol in a break with most of his industrial allies except Australia.
SPILL OVER
"I absolutely do," said Charlie Crist, the Republican governor of Florida,
when asked if he believed in a world deal by the end of 2009. "I'm an
optimist". A new president will need time to work out policies after taking
over in January 2009.
Many US presidential candidates argue that the United States needs to take a
stronger role in UN climate talks. But many other nations are reluctant to
make big promises until Washington's policies are clear.
"My feeling is that we will at least be pretty close to an agreement" on a
new global deal to replace Kyoto by the end of 2009, said Rajendra Pachauri,
head of the UN Climate Panel. "It may spill over by a few months."
Kyoto binds 36 rich nations to cap emissions of greenhouse gases until 2012
and a new global deal would seek to engage outsiders such as the United
States and developing countries such as China, India and Brazil.
"We need to feel the urgency that the planet demands of us. We are the
planet's conscience," Brazilian Environment Minister Marina Silva said. "If
it depended on me, on Brazil and other leaders in various parts of the
world, I think we will" have an accord by end 2009.
De Boer said that a meeting of UN environment ministers in December in Bali
should set a 2009 deadline. "Otherwise conceivably the process could go on
indefinitely," he said.
Governments took eight years to ratify Kyoto, from 1997 to 2005.
Bush said Kyoto would cost too much and wrongly omitted binding targets for
developing nations. In a shift, he now wants major emitters to agree
long-term targets for curbs by the end of 2008 to bolster chances of a UN
pact in 2009.
And Australia might shift course if an election due within weeks brings the
opposition Labor Party government to power. Labour is committed to ratifying
Kyoto.
Climate change "is the ultimate challenge to the international community,
and to that extent it is a challenge we can't fail," said Peter Garrett,
Labor's environment spokesman.
Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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