Binding Climate Treaty May Slip Far Into 2010
Date: 17-Nov-09
Country: DENMARK
Author: By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent

Binding Climate Treaty May Slip Far Into 2010 Photo:
Albert Gea
Clocks are seen during the performance "tck tck tck" by Global Campaign
for Climate Action at the Barcelona Climate Change Talks, November 4,
2009.
Photo: Albert Gea
COPENHAGEN - A binding international treaty to limit greenhouse gas
emissions will slip to mid-2010 or beyond and a summit in Copenhagen
next month will fall short of its ambitions, the United Nations and
Denmark said on Monday.
The United Nations' top climate official said a treaty could be wrapped
up at talks in Bonn by mid-2010. Denmark, host of next month's meeting,
said it might take longer - until Mexico in December. Negotiations on a
deal, initially due to be reached at the December 7-18 summit in
Copenhagen, have stalled.
U.S. President Barack Obama and some other Asia Pacific leaders embraced
a proposal by Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen on Sunday that
next month's summit should aim for political agreements but delay a
legally binding treaty.
A prominent member of the U.S. Congress also acknowledged it could be
months before the Senate gets around to passing a domestic climate bill.
Senator John Kerry, who is leading Senate negotiations on a compromise
U.S. measure to tackle global warming, said he and other Democrats were
working toward "trying to see if we can get this to the (Senate) floor
sometime in the early spring, as early as possible."
Denmark still wants the summit to agree emissions cuts by each developed
country, actions by developing nations to slow their rising emissions,
and new funds and technology to help the poor.
Yvo de Boer, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, said he
favored at most a six-month delay for a legally binding deal -- until a
meeting in Bonn in mid-2010. That would give time for the U.S. Senate to
pass carbon-capping laws, he said.
"It's like metal, you've got to beat it when it's hot," he told Reuters
at two days of talks involving 40 environment ministers. They are trying
to end rich-poor splits blocking even a political deal for sharing out
greenhouse gas curbs.
"If we get clarity on (emission) targets, developing country engagement
and finance in Copenhagen, which I'm confident we will, then you can
nail that down in a treaty form six months later."
MEXICAN TREATY?
Danish Climate and Energy Minister Connie Hedegaard also said the
December summit should end with a clear deadline.
"Maybe a realistic deadline would be Mexico but it depends on how far
parties go on crunch issues," she told reporters. Ministerial talks are
scheduled for Mexico in December 2010.
Denmark wants world leaders to sign up to a 5-8 page "political
agreement" next month, backed up by annexes outlining commitments by
each nation.
At a U.N. food summit in Rome, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said:
"I remain positive about Copenhagen. There is no cause for alarm."
He also said a climate deal was crucial to fighting global hunger
because climate change hurts farm output in poor countries.
"There can be no food security without climate security," he said. "Next
month in Copenhagen, we need a comprehensive agreement that will provide
a firm foundation for a legally binding treaty on climate change."
China, which is under pressure to restrict its emissions growth even
though its industrial expansion is very recent, said it was "studying"
the Danish proposal for a political deal. China has overtaken the United
States as top emitter.
It made clear it is keen to tie down points that have been agreed in
principle on transfers of technology and funding from
long-industrialized nations to the developing world.
India's Environment and Forests Minister Jairam Ramesh said:
"It seems like the inability of the U.S. to come forward with a
meaningful emissions cut by the year 2020 has led to such a situation
... I am hoping that we can get a full agreement but it looks
increasingly unlikely."
STILL HOPING
Poor nations insisted that a binding treaty was still possible next
month, even though Obama and most other leaders reckon it has slipped
out of reach, not least because the U.S. Senate is unlikely to pass
carbon-capping laws by December.
"We believe that an internationally legally binding agreement is still
possible," Michael Church, the environment minister of Grenada who
chairs the 42-nation Alliance of Small Island States, told Reuters.
Developing nations say they are most at risk from heatwaves, droughts,
floods, disease and rising sea levels, and so are pressing for action
most urgently.
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan in Washington)
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