Bush's CO2 Plan Is "Neanderthal" - German Minister
GERMANY: April 18, 2008
BERLIN - US President George W Bush's plan to halt a rise in US greenhouse
gas emissions by 2025 could undermine, rather than support, efforts to
combat climate change, German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel said.
"Gabriel criticises Bush's Neanderthal speech" was the title of a news
release from the Environment Ministry on Thursday.
"Without binding limits and reduction targets for industrial countries,
climate change will not be stopped," said Sigmar Gabriel, adding the United
States and Europe had to lead the way in cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
"The motto of his speech is: losing instead of leading," said Gabriel, a
Social Democrat in conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition
government.
Bush on Wednesday unveiled plans to cap US emissions by 2025, toughening an
existing target to slow the growth of emissions by 2012 but critics say the
world needs tougher action to combat global warming.
The United States is the world's top greenhouse gas emitter. Germany is the
world's sixth largest CO2 emitter and its efforts to reduce emissions have
stagnated since the mid-1990s.
(Reporting by Madeline Chambers; Editing by Matthew Jones)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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