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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate talks deadlocked as ministers haggle
by Staff Writers
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Dec 6, 2011

Protesters holding placards take part in march in Durban on December 3, 2011 on the sidelines of UN climate talks in Durban. Non-governmental organisations and local grassroots groups have announced a protest march under the banner of "climate justice" for today, and said they expect a turnout of several thousand people. The 12-day, 194-nation talks, under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) enter a high-level phase next week with the arrival of ministers, and end on December 9. Photo courtesy AFP.

UN climate talks on Tuesday were mired in problems as environment ministers from around the world began a four-day huddle focussed on the future of the Kyoto Protocol.

The United States played down hopes for a deal with China that, by ensuring the survival of the threatened treaty, would lead to a breakthrough.

And in an exceptional show of unity, the world's four emerging giants -- Brazil, South Africa, India and China -- said a successful outcome in Durban depended on keeping Kyoto alive with a second round of commitments.

"The Kyoto Protocol should be continued and a second commitment period is a must," China's top climate negotiator Xie Zhenhua, speaking in the name of the so-called BASIC group, said at a press conference of the four countries.

"The most important issue for us in Durban is that a clear and ratifiable decision on a KP (Kyoto Protocol) second commitment period takes place. This must happen if KP parties are really committed to addressing climate change," said India's Environment Minister Jayanthi Natarajan.

Hopes of movement were raised on Sunday when China signalled willingness -- linked with conditions -- to embrace a future legally-binding treaty on carbon emissions.

Green campaigners seized on this as a chance to remove one of the roadblocks to a deal that would save Kyoto, the only treaty that sets down legally-enforceable curbs on greenhouse gases.

But US chief delegate Todd Stern on Tuesday poured cold water on the Chinese position.

"It's not my impression that there has been any change at all in the Chinese position with respect to a legally-binding agreement," Stern told a press conference.

He said key details had to be answered in such a pact.

"It would have to cover all major parties in a full way, so that it binds with equal force for everybody, unconditionally, (with) no escape hatches in the text," he said.

The 12-day climate talks are essentially a three-corner wrangle gathering the European Union along with China and the United States, which are the world's No 1 and 2 emitters.

Kyoto is an icon for green campaigners and developing countries, which seize on it as an effective means to tame global warming and show solidarity between rich and poor nations.

But the Protocol's future is clouded.

The first round of emissions pledges under Kyoto expires next year. These promises apply only to rich countries, not developing ones, nor do they concern the United States, which boycotted Kyoto in 2001.

As a result, rich Kyoto countries are refusing to sign on for a fresh round of commitments, saying this would be unfair if far bigger emitters get off the hook.

The EU has offered to sign up for a second round of commitments, but only if it secures approval for a "roadmap" leading to a new, legally-binding pact that would encompass the big carbon polluters.

Stern downplayed the significance of "legally binding," saying it was not the "be all and end all" of solutions for climate change as its defenders suggested.

Instead, he promoted an agreement endorsed in Cancun, Mexico, last year that uses a roster of voluntary emissions curbs, by 2020, to tackle greenhouse gases.

A study by German scientists released in Durban on Tuesday said these pledges would drive Earth to warming of 3.5 degrees Celsius (6.3 degrees Fahrenheit), compared to the 2.0 C (3.6 F) UN target.

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China softens stance on climate treaty
Durban, South Africa (UPI) Dec 6, 2011 - China has indicated it might consider entering into a legally binding climate treaty after 2020.

"China is willing to shoulder responsibilities in line with its development and capability as long as the legal framework after 2020 will comply with the principles of 'common but differentiated' responsibilities," said Xie Zhenhua, China's top climate negotiator, said Monday on the sidelines of the United Nations-sponsored climate change conference in South Africa, China Daily newspaper reports.

Xie, who is vice-chairman of China's National Development and Reform Commission, laid out five preconditions of such a legal framework, including an extension of the Kyoto Protocol and initiatives by developed countries to help developing countries adapt to climate change.

Under the Kyoto Protocol all industrialized nations, with the exception of the United States, are bound to reduce emissions 5 percent from 1990 levels. The first commitment period of the treaty expires in 2012.

Xie described the renewal of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol as "the most important issue of Durban."

While there are no new requirements, Xie said countries need to implement the commitments and legal documents that have already been agreed to.

China, the world's top emitter of greenhouse gases, has "deeply suffered from climate change and fully understands the losses suffered by less-developed countries and small island states," Xie said.

But China's stance was perceived by some as a possible break from the alliance of emerging nations called BASIC -- Brazil, South Africa, India and China -- who say obligations to combat climate change are a responsibility of the developed world.

Speaking at a news conference Tuesday, Xie said, however, the BASIC countries are united, adding that the Kyoto Protocol should be continued "and a second commitment period is a must," Press Trust of India reports.

Regarding climate change finance, Xie said that $30 billion should flow into the fast-track finance fund for the poorest nations and that a structure should be established for the long-term finance of $100 billion a year beginning in 2020.

What appears to be missing from China's conditions said Tim Gore, climate change policy adviser for Oxfam, is the urging of deeper emission reduction targets from developed countries before 2020.

"This flexibility from China is really encouraging, which shows China is going to be a partner in building a regime we need to fight climate change," he told China Daily. "But we can't let the United States and other developed countries off the hook regarding emission reduction targets."



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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Ban pleads for Kyoto in warning of climate deadlock
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Dec 6, 2011
UN chief Ban Ki-moon warned climate talks on Tuesday that failure to overcome deadlock placed the world in peril, and begged countries to spare the endangered Kyoto Protocol. "Without exaggeration, we can say: the future of our planet is at stake - people's lives, the health of the global economy, the very survival of some nations," Ban told environment ministers at the start of a four-day ... read more


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