| EU Urges Bush To Be More Ambitious On CO2 Curbs 
    BELGIUM: April 18, 2008
 
 
 BRUSSELS - The European Commission urged US President George W Bush on 
    Thursday to be more ambitious in tackling climate change while welcoming his 
    acceptance that the United States would need to curb greenhouse gas 
    emissions.
 
 
 A spokesman for the European Union executive said Bush's plan to halt the 
    growth of US greenhouse emissions by 2025, announced on Wednesday, fell far 
    short of the action needed by developed countries to save the planet from 
    potentially catastrophic global warming.
 
 "This does not match with the level of ambition needed on the part of 
    developed countries, considering their responsibilities in the challenge we 
    face," the spokesman said in a statement to Reuters.
 
 The 27-nation EU and the United States have been at loggerheads over curbing 
    emissions since Bush revoked Washington's signature of the Kyoto protocol on 
    fighting climate change shortly after taking office in 2001.
 
 The EU introduced an Emissions Trading Scheme for carbon dioxide (CO2), the 
    main gas blamed for global warming, and has pledged to cut its greenhouse 
    gases by at least one-fifth by 2020 compared to 1990 levels.
 
 "We welcome the fact that President Bush last night recognised the need for 
    federal legislation of a legally binding nature to address greenhouse gas 
    emissions in the United States and for the first time made a reference to 
    cap and trade," the EU spokesman said.
 
 "The Commission hopes that the US will reflect further on the level of 
    ambition this represents, and notably in only stopping the growth of US 
    emissions by 2025," he said.
 
 The EU spokesman said developed countries needed, more than ever, to lead by 
    example if they are to persuade major emerging countries such as China and 
    India to join in curbing greenhouse gases to limit the rise in global 
    temperatures.
 
 The food crisis hitting many countries was at least partly due to extreme 
    weather events which accelerating climate change would only aggravate, he 
    said.
 
 (reporting by Paul Taylor, editing by Dale Hudson and William Schomberg)
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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