US Not on Board for 2050 Emissions Cut Goal - Source
JAPAN: June 27, 2008
TOKYO - Japan has yet to persuade the United States to agree to a global
goal of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent by 2050 at a G8
leaders' summit, a Japanese government source said on Thursday.
Summit host Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda faces the prospect of a diplomatic
failure at next month's talks if Washington refuses to agree to a 2050
emissions target.
A weak summit showing could erode Fukuda's support rates, which have shown a
slight bounce after dropping below 20 percent on doubts about his leadership
in the face of a feisty opposition that controls parliament's upper house
and can stall legislation.
Japan wants the Group of Eight summit on July 8 and an expanded meeting the
next day with eight other major economies, including China, to build
momentum for UN-led talks on a framework for cutting carbon emissions after
the Kyoto Protocol's first phase expires in 2012.
But doubts persist about how far the G8 will be able to go beyond an
agreement reached at last year's summit in Germany.
The G8 agreed last year they would seriously consider a global goal of
halving the world's greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
"It seems to me personally that if Japan fails to mention '50 by 50', maybe
Prime Minister Fukuda will face a very strong argument from the media, the
general public, and opposition parties," the Japanese government source
said.
Speculation has simmered that Fukuda's party might replace him with a more
popular politician after the summit to improve its chances in an election
that must be held by late 2009.
The source said an agreement on a shared long-term goal was by no means a
done deal, although there was still hope that US President George W. Bush
would commit to the target.
Comments by US officials have cast doubt on whether the G8 would issue its
own statement on climate change at the summit in Toyako, northern Japan,
although Tokyo is pressing for one, diplomatic sources said.
Washington wants the main forum for emissions cuts to be the Major Economies
Meeting, a dialogue it set up last year to include big emerging economies
such as Brazil, China and India with the G8. The next MEM will be held on
the sidelines of the G8 on July 9.
NO BIG BREAKTHROUGH
Britain's climate envoy also cautioned against expecting a big breakthrough
in the Toyako talks on how to fight global warming caused by burning fossil
fuels and the release of other gases, such as methane.
"We're not going to have a major breakthrough in the global effort on
climate change because the conditions at the moment are not conducive,"
Britain's special representative for climate change, John Ashton, told a
news conference in Tokyo.
Ashton said he expected the "beginning of a sense that we have a shared
goal, a long-term goal" to emerge at the summit but added: "We're still some
way from having agreement on that."
Last December, 190 countries agreed on a two-year UN-led negotiating process
to forge a successor to the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol on cutting
carbon emissions.
Those talks will culminate in Copenhagen in December 2009.
The Kyoto pact's first phase obliges many industrialised nations to curb
emissions between 2008-12. The goal for the next stage is to bind all
nations to reductions to minimise the worst effects of climate change, such
as rising seas, droughts, floods and melting glaciers.
Big emerging economies such as China and India want rich nations to take
bold steps first, including setting mid-term targets for reducing emissions
by 2020 or 2030, a step already taken by the European Union.
But Washington insists it will only agree to binding targets if big emerging
emitters also come on board, while Fukuda has said the G8 was not the right
forum for agreeing mid-term targets.
Negotiators from the Major Economies Meeting group who met over the weekend
in Seoul failed to agree on a draft statement mentioning numerical targets
for either a long-term global target to cut emissions or mid-term goals for
developed countries.
A draft statement by the group, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, said
participants recognised the need for "deep cuts" in global emissions and
urged serious consideration be given to "ambitious scenarios" outlined by a
UN climate change panel.
Those scenarios call for cuts of 50-85 percent or 30-60 percent, by 2050.
The draft -- expected to form the basis of a statement by MEM leaders in
Japan -- also said major developed economies would set mid-term goals while
major developing economies would take steps with a view to "achieving a
deviation from business as usual emissions", referring to curbing growth in
emissions.
"There was definitely no breakthrough in Seoul," said one diplomatic source,
who added it would nonetheless be meaningful for leaders to restate what was
agreed upon in Bali last year. (Editing by David Fogarty)
Story by Linda Sieg
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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