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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Desperate fight to save deal at stricken climate talks
by Staff Writers
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Dec 10, 2011



Negotiators at the UN climate talks late Saturday battled against time, exhaustion and division in the hope of salvaging a landmark deal on global warming.

More than a day after the scheduled end of the UN climate talks, the conference under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) was heading for its 14th day -- and a second unbroken night of wrangling.

It is a record even by the fractious standards of climate politics: the talks were originally intended to run for just 12 days.

But the marathon was straining to the very limit the nerves among ministers or their stand-ins in the 194-nation forum.

"We can achieve a major breakthrough in the history of this convention," Brazil's top climate official, Luiz Alberto Figueiredo, said as he pleaded for the sometimes acerbic debate to be curtailed.

Veteran observers refused to bet on the outcome. They did not rule out an new bust-up, just two years after the stormy Copenhagen Summit.

But hopes at the conference centered on a political deal being crafted behind closed doors.

Pushed by the European Union (EU), the scheme would ensure the survival of the Kyoto Protocol, a landmark treaty defended by poor countries but increasingly dismissed by rich ones as out of date.

It would also, for the first time, lead to a legally binding agreement by 2015 which would bring all economies -- including the emerging giants and the United States -- under the same roof.

A loose coalition of nearly 90 African countries, least-developed nations and small island states, along with Brazil and South Africa, have rallied behind the EU "roadmap."

But so far Washington, Beijing and New Delhi have not shown their hands, though clues have leaked out of the negotiating sessions on their bottom lines.

One of the biggest stumbling blocks in the proposed compromise was just two words: the term "legally binding."

This terminology is perceived as political dynamite in Washington, given the powerful conservative currents in Congress -- and the presidential elections less than a year away.

India and the United States are also reluctant to see the new pact go into force before 2020, a delay that many vulnerable nations -- already suffering serious climate-related impacts -- will be reluctant to accept.

Plenary sessions Saturday focussed on the two tracks of a highly complex negotiating process, but ran into immediate problems.

Leftwing Latin American countries and poor nations in Africa complained fiercely about gaps in text or failures to address climate change more vigorously.

EU negotiators were not discouraged.

"I don't give up and I will never give up, until all possibilities are exhausted," European Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard told journalists.

"It would be such a pity if the world wasted this opportunity."

More and more ministers abandoned the conference to catch their planes home, yielding their authority to senior officials with less clout to broker a deal.

"Ministers have already started to leave," said Alden Meyer of a US thinktank, the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).

"I don't know when they lose critical mass on this front, in terms of ability to reach political compromises."

Memories in the UN climate process remain deeply scarred by the 2009 Copenhagen Summit.

Intended to set the seal on a historic treaty, that conference nearly collapsed amid nit-picking and finger-pointing. Face was saved in the final hours by a lowest-common-denominator deal cobbled together in back rooms.

One option in Durban, given the chaos of unfinished business, would be to suspend the meeting until the middle of next year, said some European delegates.

Research presented at Durban said that voluntary carbon pledges under the so-called Copenhagen Accord are falling far short of the goal of limiting warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

In fact, the world is on track for a 3.5 C (6.3 F) rise, a likely recipe for droughts, floods, storms and rising sea levels that will threaten tens of millions, according to German data.

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India, China clash with EU over UN climate package
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Dec 11, 2011 - India and China clashed angrily with the European Union over a planned "roadmap" towards a new pact on curbing greenhouse gases at the UN climate talks here on Sunday.

Indian Environment Minister Jayanthi Natarajan told a plenary of the talks, running more than a day and a half into overtime, that her country was being threatened with demands to surrender the principle of burden-sharing between rich and poor.

"India will never be intimidated by threats or intimidation or any kind of pressure like this," she warned.

China's chief delegate, Xie Zhenhua, gesticulating fiercely, said it supported the Indian position.

"We should maintain the principle of common but differentiated responsibility," Xie said, referring to one of the pillars of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCCC).

He accused developed countries -- which he did not name -- of hypocrisy in demanding that poorer countries shoulder too much of the load in reducing greenhouse-gas emissions.

"We are doing things that you are not doing. What qualifies you to say these things?" he asked. "We are taking actions -- we want to see your actions."

The talks were scheduled to end on Friday after 12 days, but staggered on into the early hours of Sunday in the hope of an agreement.

On the table is a Europe-backed "roadmap" towards a new worldwide pact on carbon emissions that would be completed by 2015.

For the first time, it would bring all the major emitters -- including China and India -- unto the same legally-binding roof.

Until now, developing giants have had no such constraints on their carbon pollution.



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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Desperate fight to salvage deal at stricken climate talks
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Dec 10, 2011
A day after their scheduled close, UN climate talks fought against despondency on Saturday as 194 countries grappled for a deal to tame greenhouse gases. Lifeblood seemed to drain from the conference as ministers scurried to catch flights home, once-thronging meeting rooms emptied and workers dismantled exhibition booths and packed up posters and equipment. Hopes centered on a core group ... read more


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