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Major powers must spearhead climate protection: Japan

Italy had wettest winter in 200 years: experts
Italy saw more rain during the last winter season than it has in 200 years, a meteorological institute said Tuesday. Between November 2008 and April this year, the peninsula received 54 percent more rain than normal for the period, the institute in central-northern Bologna said in a statement.


Alaska volcano eruption likely: scientists
Alaska's rumbling Mount Redoubt volcano is likely to erupt again in the "coming days," the Alaska Volcano Observatory reported on Tuesday. Redoubt, which began belching steam in January, erupted in March, sending a cloud of ash and smoke across the sparsely populated surrounding area. The volcano has been largely quiet for the past month. However the observatory said in a statement Redoubt's lava dome was growing "increasingly unstable" and could explode at any time. "Seismic and rockfall activity remains at an heightened level. Explosive eruption likely in coming days; could occur at any time with little or no warning," the statement said in announcing an "orange" alert. There were no casualties or damage during the March eruption at Mount Redoubt, which is located on the western shore of the Cook Inlet, some 150 kilometers (90 miles) from Anchorage.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) May 4, 2009
Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso said Tuesday that industrialised nations must lead the way in hammering out a new global climate treaty to replace the Kyoto agreement when it expires in 2012.

"We need a new framework, as of 2013, to fight climate change and the main polluting countries must assume their responsibilities" in dealing with the issue, he told reporters after talks here with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"Japan, Germany and other leading industrial countries must play a leading role" in fighting climate change, he added.

An international environmental conference is being held in Copenhagen in December in a bid to produce a new climate treaty.

At the start of a European tour in Prague on Monday, Aso agreed that Japan would join forces with the European Union, whose presidency the Czech Republic currently holds, to fight climate change.

The two sides signed a joint statement on accepting a report by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) which recommends a 25 to 40 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions for industrialised countries by 2020.

Japan has not announced its mid-term target yet, but it has pledged to reduce carbon emissions by up to 80 percent by 2050.

But Tokyo is lagging behind as it has been reluctant to hamper industry in an ailing economy.

Aso and Merkel also discussed the global economic crisis and their governments' moves to deal with it, along with the need for the international community to back UN Security Council sanctions against North Korea.

The Security Council on April 13 banned transactions and called on UN member states to freeze the assets of three of the country's business entities after Pyongyang carried out what the West described as a disguised missile test.

"Germany will do everything it can to support the six-party talks," Merkel said, referring to efforts by China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the United States to work toward North Korean disarmament.

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EU, Japan team up to fight climate change
Prague (AFP) May 4, 2009
The European Union and Japan decided to join forces in the battle against climate change and invited large countries to follow suit at a summit meeting in Prague on Monday.







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