| Risks Mount for Global Warming Fight - UN
UK/SPAIN: October 7, 2008
LONDON/BARCELONA - The struggle against climate change must not follow world
trade talks into limbo as risks mount that the credit crisis will sap
commitment to the fight, the UN climate chief said on Monday. Yvo de Boer
said he was worried about the impact of the credit crisis on international
action to fight climate change, as US and European governments pour cash
into keeping commercial banks afloat.
"You can only spend a dollar or a euro once," he said.
"I certainly think it's a worrying development. It's more a matter of the
past couple of days than the past couple of weeks," de Boer told Reuters,
referring to a call over the weekend by European automakers for money to
help them cope with emissions curbs.
"There's growing pressure ... from the point of view of competitiveness," he
said.
De Boer said that UN negotiations were still on track but, in the worst
case, there were risks of failing to meet an internationally agreed deadline
for a new UN climate treaty by the end of 2009 in Copenhagen.
"For me there is no Plan B," he said. "I have the sense that it's a huge and
daunting task but we're still on track, there's still commitment to reach an
agreement in Copenhagen."
"One alternative would be that we don't manage to meet a deadline in
Copenhagen and that we slide into a WTO-like process that goes on without a
clearly agreed deadline, or perhaps even worse that you get a highly
fragmented approach to climate change," he said.
In climate talks so far rich nations had failed to flesh out their promises
to give technology and financing help to poorer countries, China's climate
change ambassador Yu Qingtai told Reuters in an interview on Monday.
Yu was pessimistic about the prospect for agreement on a new global climate
treaty meant to avert more droughts, floods, extinctions of species and
rising sea levels.
That split between rich and poor nations resonates with a collapse in July
of the World Trade Organisation's (WTO) Doha round of free trade talks --
partly following a dispute between the United States and emerging economies.
FIGHT AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
China wants the West to do more to finance the fight against climate change,
but financial commitment from the United States and Europe may be diverted
by bailouts of the banking sector.
"There's a risk that less public money will be available in the North for
cooperation with the South on technology and capacity building," said de
Boer. "Taken together there's a risk that short-term concerns will prevail."
"I hope that this doesn't result in people in the South waiting for (climate
change) adaption money having to wait for mortgages and credit card debts to
be paid off in the North."
In a "Super Tuesday" vote this week, key European Parliament lawmakers will
vote on whether to back ambitious, unilateral goals for the European Union
to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
While they are expected to back the overall target to cut greenhouse gases,
they are under intense lobby pressure to cut the costs of meeting those
goals for industry.
Poland said on Monday that it was assembling a minority of member states
sufficient to block cost impacts on coal-fired electricity generation from
EU energy and climate proposals -- in growing signs final agreement may be
delayed.
"I certainly hope the EU manages to finalise its climate and energy package
by the end of the year," said de Boer.
(For summit blog: http://summitnotebook.reuters.com/) Additional reporting
by Nina Chestney and Michael Szabo in London
Story by Gerard Wynn and Alister Doyle
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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