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Climate: UN talks set for April in Bangkok

UN's Ban to US: take the lead on climate change
Davos, Switzerland (AFP) Jan 28, 2011 - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday called on the United States and Europe to take the lead in combating climate change, rather than waiting for others to act. "This climate change campaign should be led, must be led by developed countries. This has started from industrial revolution, and the United States and European countries they have to be morally, politically responsible," Ban told world elites gathered at the Davos meeting of the World Economic Forum. "The United States as a largest economy and superpower, this superpower of the world should take the political will, political leadership and invest in it," he added. The United Nations chief pointed out that Washington should set its own house in order instead of waiting for others to take action.

"You have to do your own homework before waiting for others to do." There are "psychological games" between the United States and Europe on one side, and China, India and Brazil on the other, said Ban. "They ask you should do first. I think all the proposals are on the table. "We know each other's pollution. I think they should be responsible for humanity, we have a responsibilty to keep this world sustainable," said Ban. Making a plea for action on climate change, Ban noted that the world has believed in "consumption without consequences" until now. "Climate change is showing us that the old model is more than obselete. It has rendered it extremely dangerous. It is a recipe for natural disaster. It is a global suicide attack," he charged.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Jan 28, 2011
UN climate talks will take place in Bangkok from April 3-8 to follow up on last month's meeting in Mexico, including the future of the Kyoto Protocol, sources close to the negotiations said on Friday.

The meeting, of senior officials, will deal with some of the technical details resulting from the two-week conference in Cancun.

They include plans for a fund for poor nations badly exposed to climate change and financing the conservation of tropical forests.

The Cancun meeting also left unresolved the future of the Kyoto Protocol, the world's only agreement that specifies curbs in greenhouse gases.

The protocol's first commitment period expires at the end of 2012, a deadline that is causing jitters in the carbon market.

The Bangkok talks will be the first of the year gathering signatories of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the protocol's parent treaty.

Two other meetings will be held this year -- a scheduled meeting in Bonn, Germany, at senior official level, and the annual meeting at ministerial level, taking place in Durban, South Africa, in December.

An additional meeting is likely to take place in October between the Bonn and Durban talks, one of the sources said, adding that the venue was unknown.

earlier related report
Ban Ki-moon shifts focus in climate change fight: report
London (AFP) Jan 28, 2011 - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is shifting his focus away from involvement in international climate change talks and towards new areas in the fight against global warming, a report said Friday.

Ban is to redirect his efforts from trying to push forward the international climate change negotiations to a broader agenda of promoting clean energy and sustainable development, UN officials told Britain's Guardian newspaper.

After his deep involvement with the failed Copenhagen summit in 2009, Ban realised world leaders were not going to strike a sweeping agreement on global warming in the next few years, the officials said.

"It is very evident that there will not be a single grand deal at any point in the near future," said Robert Orr, UN assistant secretary general for strategic planning and a key adviser to Ban.

"Because the circumstances have changed, the nature of his engagement is changing," Orr added. "The relative balance of his time is shifting towards getting it done on the ground out there."

The Guardian reported that Ban was ending his hands-on involvement with international climate change negotiations.

But this was played down by UN spokesman Farhan Haq, who told AFP: "That's not quite the case. He is still involved."

The paper also said that Ban will not be deeply involved in negotiations leading up to the next UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, meeting at Durban in December 2011.

Despite the shift in focus, Orr insisted that Ban still believed an international agreement on climate change was essential, saying: "We are still going in the same direction."

Ban has previously said that it would be better to focus on individual areas than on clinching an overall deal.

Before the Cancun climate conference last year, he said it would be better to make progress on areas such as financing efforts against climate change and on forestry than on reaching a sweeping agreement.

He is due to discuss climate change at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Friday.



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