POZNAN, Poland, Dec. 10, 2008 (AFP) -- U.N. talks on crafting a new climate
change treaty inched forward on Wednesday, with delegates hoping the E.U. would
spur the process by approving its own pact at a crunch summit.
The conference in the Polish city of Poznan, gathering more than 11,600
participants from around the world, reaches a climax on Thursday with the
Some 150 environment ministers and top government officials were expected,
as well as U.N. head Ban Ki-moon and U.S. senators John Kerry and Amy Klobuchar --
two figures seen as the eyes and ears of president-elect Barack Obama.
Negotiations among the 192-members U.N. Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) are mid-way through a two-year "roadmap" set down on the
Indonesian island of Bali last year.
They are aiming for a deal in Copenhagen in December 2009 for a
far-reaching pact that would roll back the peril of global warming.
It would take effect from 2012, when provisions expire under the UNFCCC's
Kyoto Protocol.
This is proving a tall order, with the complex discussions in Poznan
centered on how to share out the commitments and costs of cutting the carbon
pollution that stokes global warming.
Rich countries acknowledge their historic role in pushing up global
temperatures but they say emerging powers like China and India must also take
action.
Developing and poorer nations hit back with the argument that the
industrialised world should lead by example, and foot the bill for
clean-energy technology and coping with the impact of global warming.
"It is going slow. But at this stage, there is some progress." South
Africa's minister of environment and tourism, Marthinus van Schalkwyk, told
Negotiators agreed that by next June they would whittle down a 100-page
document, stuffed with hundreds of sometimes conflicting proposals, into a
workable blueprint for action beyond 2012, said a U.N. source.
"It's quite significant," the source said.
Pressure group Greenpeace complained that the talks were becoming bogged
down and, in a large banner hung above the entrance to Poznan train station,
urged ministers to "get serious."
The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said activists wearing eyeball
costumes would greet ministers as they arrived, demonstrating the world is
"eagerly observing the negotiations and expects constructive conclusions."
France's climate ambassador Brice Lalonde said hopes of a breakthrough at
Poznan had always been misplaced.
"Poznan was never going to be a conference where a spectacular outcome was
to be expected," Lalonde told reporters. "We hope for a spectacular outcome in
Copenhagen next year."
But delegates also wondered how the Bali "roadmap" will look after an E.U.
summit in Brussels on Thursday and Friday that will aim to hammer out an
accord over Europe's climate plan.
The E.U., credited with salvaging the Kyoto Protocol after the United States
refused to ratify it in 2001, has championed demands for a tough post-2012
pact.
Its programme sets down the most ambitious goals of any advanced economy,
including 20 percent less greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 compared with 1990
levels, increased use of renewable energy sources and overall energy savings.
But a major sticking point is the plan to require industry to start buying
its polluting rights via auction, raising objections from economic powerhouse
Germany and coal-heavy eastern Europe countries like Poland.
"You can see the U.S. and China moving (on climate change). We will destroy
or undermine that movement if we go flaky in Europe now," leading economist
Nicholas Stern, author of a landmark 2006 report on climate change, said in
Poznan on Tuesday.
German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel told reporters on Wednesday that
the E.U. risked losing its vanguard role and giving the impression it was "no
longer serious" on climate change if no deal was struck in Brussels.
Copyright 2008 -- Agence France-Presse
Are E.U. With Us?
All eyes on European Union as U.N. climate talks stumble on 0
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