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Where's the money to fight climate change, asks China, G-77

by palashbiswas @ 2007-12-09 - 19:40:33

Where's the money to fight climate change, asks China, G-77
Palash Biswas
Contact: Palash C Biswas, C/O Mrs Arati Roy, Gosto Kanan, Sodepur, Kolkata- 700110, India. Phone: 91-033-25659551
Email: palashbiswaskl@gmail.com
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Where's the money to fight climate change, asks China, G-77
Bali: The Group-77 and China have expressed deep concern over a huge funding gap to address the global warming, and have sought a review of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) financial mechanism, a move that is being strongly opposed by the US, Japan and the European Union.
The UNFCCC has estimated that it will take at least $40 billion a year to address the global warming and noted that the international financing available for the purpose last year totalled only $36 million.
As the Dec 3-14 UN conference on climate change took its Sunday break here, squabbling over this basic issue continued in the various resort hotels around the conference venue where most of the delegates from 187 countries attending the conference are staying.
Speaking on behalf of the G-77 and China, the group's current co-chair Pakistan has bluntly stated that unless this funding gap was bridged, the objectives of the UN convention - to mitigate the emission of greenhouse gases that are leading to climate change and to adapt to the change that is already here - cannot be met.
The $36 million that was available in 2006 came from a two percent levy on clean development mechanism (CDM) projects. Even under the most optimistic carbon-trading scenario painted by UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer, this levy cannot generate more than $5 billion in 2030.
That is why the G-77 and China want the financial mechanism as well as transfer of green technology to be reviewed through a formal process that is time-bound and can be monitored.
"But the US, Japan and EU are stalling discussion on this by repeatedly stating that any talks should take place within the UNFCCC's subsidiary body on scientific and technology advice - which does not deal with implementing any decision - rather than within the subsidiary body on implementation," according to Ilana Solomon of the international NGO ActionAid.
"The rich countries are also saying that these issues should be taken up under the review of the Kyoto Protocol's Article 9, which is yet to begin," she added, condemning the position taken by the industrialised countries.
The G-77 is a loose coalition of developing nations, designed to promote its members' collective economic interests and create an enhanced joint negotiating capacity in the United Nations. There were 77 founding members of the organization, but has since expanded to 130 member countries.
The UNFCCC agrees with the G-77 position that current funding is clearly insufficient to address the climate change, especially after 2012, when the ongoing Kyoto Protocol for this purpose comes to end.
But de Boer feels that international aid cannot possibly bridge this gap, and the money must come by moving private investments towards green technologies in a big way.
Finding ways to bridge this financial gap is a major item on the agenda of trade ministers meeting here this week and finance ministers who will meet here Monday and Tuesday.

Gore warns CO2 cuts needed for survival of civilization
Oslo (AP): Nobel Peace Prize winner Al Gore said Sunday that reducing CO2 emissions is essential to the ``survival of our civilization'' _ and reiterated he had ``no plans'' to run for U.S. president.
Gore, speaking at a joint news conference with the chief U.N. climate scientist, said cutting emissions was ``in our self-interest.''
``It is a question of the survival of our civilization,'' Gore told reporters in Oslo.
The former U.S. vice president and the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change shared the coveted award for their efforts to draw the world's attention to the dangers of global warming.
Asked whether he had made any final decision on whether to enter the U.S. presidential race, Gore said: ``I have no plans to be a candidate.''
He added that he didn't expect re-enter politics in the future, ``but I see no reason to rule it out entirely.''
Gore also said he had not decided which candidate to endorse in next year's presidential election, or whether to endorse anyone at all.
Gore and IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri _ who are to formally receive the Nobel Peace Price on Monday _ met with Norwegian leaders Sunday.
US, China 'not ready' to commit to mandatory emissions' cuts
Bali (AP): The world's top two polluters, the United States and China, say they are not ready to commit to mandatory caps on global-warming gases at the UN climate conference on Bali. But that does not seem to worry Yvo de Boer, who says it is too early to hammer out that kind of detail.
"This meeting is not about delivering a fully negotiated climate change deal, but it is to set the wheels in motion," the UN climate chief said, as presidents, prime ministers and environmental ministers prepared to join discussions on how to head off the impacts of rising temperatures, from expanding oceans to deadly droughts and diseases.
"Reaching a conclusion even in two years is going to be very ambitious, let alone trying to achieve that kind of result in two weeks."
The main negotiating text for the December 3-14 meeting, which was obtained by The Associated Press on Saturday, mentions targets for reducing the amount of pollutants pumped into the atmosphere, but in a nonbinding way.
Its preamble notes the widely accepted view that industrial nations' emissions should be cut by 25 per cent to 40 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020. But even those numbers are likely to set off renewed debate at the Bali talks, which are meant to launch a two-year negotiation for a post-Kyoto Protocol agreement.
Delegates from nearly 190 nations will, among other things, decide what form those talks should take.


 
 

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technomisttechnomist [Member]
2007-12-09 @ 20:08

Am I the only person who thinks its a bit cheeky for the Chinese to be putting their hands out like beggars for aid at a time when their have a massive trade surplus?

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