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No binding climate deal at Durban, warn US, EU

Responsibility for CO2 emissions debated
Washington (UPI) Apr 26, 2011 - Lower CO2 emissions in developed countries have been neutralized by an increase in developing nations as they produce goods for trade, a U.S. study says.

In a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers found that CO2 emissions from the production of traded goods and services had increased between 1990 and 2008 from 4.2 gigatons per year to 7.9 gigatons, or from 20 percent of global emissions to 26 percent.

The study found most of this increase was in developing countries producing goods for trade, primarily to developed countries, PhysOrg.com reported.

The disparity has many groups calling for a change in the Kyoto protocol agreement's practice of only counting CO2 emissions that are produced in-country, rather than the CO2 footprint of those products that are consumed.

While developed nations have been able to claim collective reductions of almost 2 percent, they are consuming products produced in other countries that were made using processes that continue to pour CO2 into the atmosphere.

Environmentalists argue developed nations should be held accountable for the carbon emissions released in making the products they now consume rather than holding the developing nations that produce them wholly responsible.

by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) April 27, 2011
There will be no binding deal on emissions at this year's UN climate summit as the South African hosts and other economic powers are simply "not ready," the United States and Europe said on Wednesday.

"It is not a necessary thing to have right away," top US climate official Todd Stern said after European Union counterpart Connie Hedegaard admitted hopes of a breakthrough pact in Durban are already dead.

"The good news is that there is a general recognition of the necessity of a legally-binding agreement," EU climate action commissioner Connie Hedegaard said.

"The bad news is no legally-binding agreement deal will be done in Durban."

The pair spoke after a two-day meeting of the so-called Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate (MEF), a gathering of the world's 17 largest economies aimed at advancing efforts to cut greenhouse emissions, increase the supply of clean energy and mitigate global warming.

Stern said discussion focused on whether the UN summit would even articulate the goal of a legally-binding agreement "in the coming years."

"In a nutshell, our view is it would have to include all the major players -- China, India, Brazil, Russia, South Africa," he said, underlining that powerful states such as these are "not ready to have international, legally-binding obligations."

"I'm not even criticising that," he added, noting that China's rise, both as a major economic power and emitter, has also seen Beijing become one of the world's top developers of clean energy.

With US ratification also "a big hill to climb," a reminder that Washington did not pass the existing UN Kyoto Protocol, Stern argued that much can still be achieved even when agreements are not legally-binding.

He cited commercial international relations from post-World War II through to the 1995 formation of the World Trade Organization, insisting the WTO's predecessor "GATT wasn't legally-binding."

The key issue for participants ahead of Durban is how to bring timid agreements reached in Cancun, Mexico last December "to life," Stern said, especially getting a 'green fund' for investing in renewable energies "from paper to money flowing."

The UN climate process almost collapsed in a more ambitious effort 12 months earlier in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Stern stressed that it was too early to tell if a retreat from nuclear energy following the post-quake accident in Japan would make states less likely to commit to ambitious emissions-reduction demands.

He hinted, though, that shipping and aviation, major sectoral polluters along with farming on a global scale, were likely to be given more time to negotiate their own deals.

The International Maritime Organisation and the International Civil Aviation Organisation "are the right venues" for tackling the reliance on so-called bunker fuels, he said, although nations would seek to integrate these industries in the "relatively near term."



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