Climate Change Conference: Island nations protest

Published: 10 December 2009 y., Thursday

Klimato kaita
Don’t lose faith in a legally binding climate agreement being reached in Copenhagen. That was the core issue on Wednesday as a large group of island nations called for harder work to get such an agreement into place by appointing a special group. The initiative met with resistance from countries such as China and India during a tough debate at the conference.

It was during the major plenary meeting on Wednesday morning that the issue on the legal forms a new climate agreement would take was raised. Fundamentally, the disagreement concerns if, and in which way, a legally binding agreement shall be drawn up during the Copenhagen meeting itself. Several island nations, spearheaded by Tuvalu, wanted to appoint a special group to work on the issue. Islands are particularly vulnerable to the floods and storms that will be the result of climate change unless curbed and the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) are therefore pursuing the policy that a legally binding agreement must be reached now.

Others, including China, India and Saudi Arabia were of the opinion that discussions should focus on substance rather than procedural issues. The EU has earlier emphasised the wish to see a legally binding agreement reached in Copenhagen but also that this would be difficult to achieve. This is why, at this stage, efforts should concentrate on reaching general political consensus. To others it is also an issue of resources:

“We have a small delegation here. We will not be able to participate in these kinds of discussions. It is also far too early to appoint a group as it in practice establishes the death of the Kyoto Protocol”, said Venezuelan Ambassador during the plenary meeting.

Not resolved

As this type of decision requires consensus, the Danish Presidency held meetings with representatives for the two groups during the day. Early on Wednesday evening, the issue was not yet resolved. The EU’s negotiators had a separate meeting with representatives of the island nations in the afternoon. After the meeting, the AOSIS President Dessima Williams again underlined that a legally binding agreement should be the goal in Copenhagen (see webcast interview above).

“China blocking”

At the EU’s daily press conference focus was on another issue. The EU’s Chief Negotiator Anders Turesson brought up the form discussions should take in the LCA group. In this group issues such as emission targets are discussed by countries that are not necessarily party to the existing Kyoto Protocol. The United States are part of this group, which makes the LCA an important forum in the attempt to carve out a future climate agreement. Mr Turesson argues that China and the Group of Developing Countries (G77) block the EU's opportunities to discuss emission reductions with the US.

“As things are standing now, we have no forum to discuss emission targets with all developed countries. This has a negative impact on the results we can achieve here”, said Mr Turesson. His speech received the support of Spanish Chief Negotiator Alicia Montalvo.

 “The process is being abused in a blocking manner”, she said.

See the entire press conference via the link on the right.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Baghdad churches bombed

A wave of bombings targeting churches in the Iraqi capital killed four people and injured dozens more. more »

Hikers die in China flash flood

Seven Chinese hikers are dead and a dozen more are missing are being swept away in flash flooding. more »

Hundreds injured in China quake

Thousands of families in China's Yunnan province are homeless after an earthquake hit the region destroying homes and roads. more »

Cyber attacks linked to N.Korea

Websites in the United States and South Korea have come under attack. more »

The Uighur dilemma

A show of force in Northwestern China. Thousands of Chinese troops marched on People's Square in the volatile capital of China's north-western Xinjiang province, after more than 150 people were killed in the region's worst ethnic violence in decades. more »

Climate breakthrough at G8 summit

“It is a great achievement that the two-degree target was taken up at the meeting with the Major Economies Forum”, said a delighted Fredrik Reinfeldt after the evening’s meeting with the MEF countries. more »

Russian murder on U.S. agenda

Though America's Under Secretary of State was in Russia to discuss current affairs William Burns also took time out to remind the world of a five-year-old murder. more »

World economy, climate and development on first day of G8

On the first day of the G8 summit, discussions have focused on the financial and economic crisis and the climate and global issues. more »

Swedish MEPs on Sweden's EU Presidency

As their country assumes the first EU Presidency, we ask some MEPs from different sides of the Swedish political divide what they want and expect from the next 6 months. more »

Crane crashes through Liverpool roof

Residents of some Liverpool flats certainly didn't envisage a crane crashing through the roof in the darkness of Monday night. more »