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Emerging climate fund looks at role for markets

Brazil eyes climate talks compromise on Kyoto
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Dec 10, 2010 - Brazil on Friday predicted a compromise at UN-led climate talks in Mexico on the key stumbling block of the future of the Kyoto Protocol, saying Japan and Russia would accept new language. Under a compromise formula, the Cancun conference would urge continued talks on a second round of the Kyoto Protocol, although it would not commit countries to make new pledges on curbing carbon emissions under the treaty for now. Japan and Russia "accept this language, while before they didn't accept it," Brazilian negotiator Luiz Alberto Figueiredo said. "This is positive language which clearly states a second period of commitments" under the Kyoto Protocol, said Figueiredo, a supporter of the treaty.

Britain's climate change secretary also suggested Japan and Russia could accept the protocol. "I think we've made good technical progress in terms of finding potential solutions on the Japan, Russia versus second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol issue," Chris Huhne told journalists. The Kyoto Protocol requires wealthy nations to cut carbon emissions and the greenhouse gases blamed for climate warming through the end of 2012. With a new treaty increasingly unlikely to be ready, the European Union has led calls to extend Kyoto. Japan has adamantly rejected such calls, saying the treaty negotiated in its ancient capital is unfair by making no demands of top emitters China and the United States.

Russia, a major fossil fuel exporter, has stated plainly that it would not make new pledges under Kyoto, while Canada is also unenthusiastic about a new round. Figueiredo said the Cancun talks would also compile promises by major emitters including the United States to cut emissions which they presented at last year's Copenhagen summit. Copenhagen ended in an accord which major countries supported, but it was not formally approved by UN climate talks. Huhne on Friday underlined the urgency to demonstrate progress in Cancun. "I think there is a real danger if we don't get a successful outcome this becomes a zombie process," he said.
by Staff Writers
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Dec 9, 2010
With billions of dollars in climate aid for poor nations set to go into operation, officials and businesses are looking at a role for private markets, but critics are deeply suspicious.

Wealthy economies promised to help provide 30 billion dollars in rapid assistance -- for measures such as cleaner technologies and incentives to protect forests -- as well as 100 billion dollars a year in the future, at last year's Copenhagen summit.

Pledges have since increased, including by millions of dollars during the latest major talks here, but overall targets remain distant, with some countries just restating pledges because of tough economic times.

"It's absolutely clear that this (the current targets) cannot be delivered by public funding but that it requires private capital," said German Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen at a side event in Cancun this week.

"Approximately 85 percent of investment flows in climate projects so far have been private," Danish climate minister Lykke Friis pointed out.

How private investment would flow into the green fund is a contentious issue, with many NGOs and poorer countries concerned they would be sidelined.

Financiers have pointed to a potential role for investment funds, venture capital or international banks.

Companies around the world will need to undergo an enormous shift in the way they operate, Imtiaz Ahmad, executive director of carbon finance at Morgan Stanley, said at a Cancun side meeting.

"This is not business as usual. If it was we'd still be building coal-fired factories," Ahmad said.

He pointed to bond markets as a possible solution to absorb the 100 billion dollars per year pledged by 2020 at Copenhagen.

"It's very important that we don't as a private sector have the multilateral development banks dictating to us," he added.

"That isn't going to work. We're going to be looking at rewards."

Local operators of environmental projects have meanwhile expressed fears that they will miss out on new investment opportunities, as they did during decades of industrial development.

Simon Thuo, East African coordinator for the Global Water Partnership, said small African businesses feared that slick operations by international companies or powerful local monopolies would win potential funds.

"The regulatory measures need to be improved so it is a level playing field for all actors," Thuo said.

"At the end of the day, the most important thing is to enhance resilience of societies, especially the poor, not just to meet targets."

Leftist activists and Mexican peasants took to the streets of Cancun during the conference in part to protest against a market role in forest preservation, which they said would allow rich nations to keep polluting.

Negotiators have expressed optimism about setting up the architecture of a future climate fund, but a remaining sticking point is whether to include a role for international bodies, such as the World Bank, in administering aid.

Guidelines still need to be set for reporting financial information efficiently and transparently, and a dispute remains on whether wealthy nations would be required to provide half of the aid to help the poor adapt.

Then there is the question of how wealthy nations would raise the money, with some advocating levies on airplane or shipping fuel.

The Dutch government set up a website, www.faststartfinance.org, in September to improve transparency with publicly available information on the first rapid finance pledges.

"We have to know where the money comes from, how it is spent and of course probably the most important, what the results are," Dutch Environment Minister Joop Atsma said at a side event in Cancun.

Those participating in the website, including the European Union, the United States and Japan, have so far pledged more than 24 billion dollars and committed almost five billion in 2010.

Many hope that concrete financial pledges and successful projects will help maintain momentum in climate talks, despite difficult negotiations.

"It is important to see that, beside this negotiation track, that there is action," Roettgen said.



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