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EU confident Obama will follow its lead on climate change

EU fails to pledge climate aid to poor nations
EU environment ministers on Monday failed to agree on how to support poorer nations to fund the fight against climate change, and kicked the problem upstairs to the heads of state and government. "We were not quite able to reach consensus on the financing mechanism. This is an issue where the (EU) council (of nations) will need more discussion time," EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas, said after an elongated meeting of EU environment ministers in Brussels. Czech deputy environment minister Jan Dursik said that "one nation wanted to keep all the options open", without naming it. It emerged that the dissenting nation was Poland, which continued talks with the EU presidency long after some other delegations had already left the talks. The unresolved matter will now go to EU finance ministers at their March 10 meeting before ending up in the laps of the 27 heads of state and government at the next European Union summit on March 19-20. The EU ministers agreed that it would take 175 billion euros per year in 2020. EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said half of that amount would need to be found for developing nations. Greenpeace slammed the EU's failure to help out. "Environment ministers have ducked and passed the climate funding hot potato to finance ministers," said Greenpeace EU climate and energy policy director Joris den Blanken. "While billions of taxpayers' money is being used to prop up failed banks and carmakers, not one euro cent is being pledged to help the developing world tackle a problem that Europeans helped create," he added. Greenpeace and other NGOs have said the European Union should be contributing around 35 billion euros.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) March 2, 2009
The EU presidency is confident that the United States under President Barack Obama "will follow the leadership of the European Union", by setting ambitious mid-term goals for cutting greenhouse gases.

The 27 EU nations in December committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent by 2020 but have also agreed to increase the cut if the rest of the developed world gets on board with the plan.

"We know that the US wants to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050, we don't know what their mid-term target is," Czech Environment Minister Martin Bursik told reporters after a meeting with his EU counterparts.

"We understand that the United States will follow the leadership of the European Union," said Bursik, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency.

The ministers see the arrival of Obama as a great boost for the chances of agreeing a far-reaching global deal for climate change at talks in Copenhagen in December.

Obama's predecessor George W. Bush refused to ratify the Kyoto protocol which the Copenhagen meeting will seek to replace.

EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas echoed the Czech optimism.

If Obama is promising such sweeping greenhouse gas cuts by 2050 "that means they have to put on the table a mid-term target also. They can't do it all in the last year."

Bursik and Dimas announced that they would visit Washington on March 14-15 to sound out the intentions of the US administration.

And "climate change will be one of the first things we will discuss with President Obama when he visits Prague on April 5," said Bursik.

Obama is to meet with European leaders at an EU-US summit in the Czech capital, Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek announced Sunday.

The EU leaders hailed Obama's plan for a landmark carbon gas cap-and-trade system to both fight climate change and pump billions into the Treasury purse to fund renewable energy programs.

The innovative program -- similar to one already in place in Europe -- would rev up US efforts against global warming by reducing the output of carbon dioxide and other polluting gases, while raising direly-needed revenue.

The administration's proposed programme was part of a 3.55-trillion-dollar budget unveiled by the president last month, which outlines a cap-and-trade system which would limit emissions of greenhouse gases by manufacturers, and permit companies to trade the right to pollute to other manufacturers.

Dimas stressed that the 30 percent emissions reduction target would be an average for developed nations and "the United States could do more or less".

The objectives will be achieved he assured, asserting that "leadership without an ambitious mid-term target" is useless.

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Canada orbiter gauges CO2 like failed OCO
Ottawa (UPI) Feb 27, 2009
A $278 million NASA satellite that crashed into the Antarctic waters in a failed launch was a larger version of a $300,000 Canadian satellite, a scientist says.







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