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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Ramping up carbon cuts before 2020 unlikely: US
by Staff Writers
Durban, South Africa (AFP) Nov 28, 2011


Pledges under the UN from the world's major carbon polluters to tackle greenhouse-gas emissions are unlikely to be revised upward before 2020, a US climate negotiator said Monday.

"The idea that countries would change their current pledges that they listed in the [Cancun] agreements seems unlikely to me," Jonathan Pershing told journalists on the first day of UN climate talks in Durban, South Africa.

"I don't see the major economies shifting those actions," he added in a clear reference not only to the United States but emerging giants China, India and Brazil.

Nations accounting for more than 80 percent of global CO2 emissions registered voluntary reduction targets through the end of the decade at last year's high-level climate talks in Cancun, Mexico.

For wealthy nations, including the European Union and the United States, these pledges were expressed as an overall cut in emissions.

For developing countries, it generally took different forms, notably targets for improving energy efficiency.

Coming into the 12-day talks in Durban, some poorer countries -- many of them already suffering severe climate change impacts -- have called for more ambitious efforts for slashing CO2 emissions.

Current pledges fall far short of what science says is needed to prevent catastrophic warming.

But Pershing said some pathways to a climate-safe world were consistent with current commitment levels.

"Our thinking -- and that which we have heard explicitly from others -- is that there is no intention from other parties to modify the pre-2020 actions that they are taking," he said.

"It is in that context, of course, that we come to a post-2020 agreement."

The EU has proposed setting a 2015 target for hammering out a legally-binding comprehensive deal that would include all major emitters, to go into effect by 2020 at the latest.

Pershing acknowledged that greater efforts would be needed after 2020, but said the EU scheme put the cart before the horse.

"Some countries want to stipulate up front that such steps should be in the form of a legally binding agreement. Others -- including us -- have indicated that they want to know more about the content of such an agreement before they commit to a particular legal form," he said.

On the Green Climate Fund, which is to deliver 100 billion dollars a year to help poorer countries fight and cope with climate change, Pershing said US objections which had blocked progress could be resolved in Durban.

"We want to see the Green Fund move forward as part of a Durban package," he said.

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Canada rejects new binding climate change pact
Ottawa (AFP) Nov 28, 2011 - Canada will not sign onto a second binding international agreement to cut greenhouse gas emissions, its environment minister said Monday as UN talks on the fate of the Kyoto Protocol kicked off.

"We will not make a second commitment to Kyoto," Environment Minister Peter Kent said of the only global pact that sets targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. "We don't need a binding convention."

He was speaking as a 12-day round of UN talks on climate change got underway in Durban, South Africa.

The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) gathers 194 countries under a process launched under the 1992 Rio Summit.

Topping the agenda is the fate of the Kyoto Protocol, whose pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions expire at the end of 2012.

"We are going to Durban to constructively work and to negotiate with all of the other parties to the convention to move towards a mandate to create a new international agreement, eventually binding, which would include all the major developed and developing emitters," Kent said.

"We expect the major emitters which were not a party to Kyoto -- the Chinas, the Indias, the United States -- to step forward and play their part to materially reduce greenhouse gases," he said.

Canadian broadcaster CTV cited unnamed sources saying Ottawa plans to formally withdraw from the Kyoto Protocol next month.

Kent would neither confirm, nor deny the report.

Canada agreed under the international Kyoto Protocol to reduce CO2 emissions to 6.0 percent below 1990 levels by 2012, but emissions have instead increased.

Saying the targets agreed to by a previous administration were unattainable, Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government rolled out its own series of measures aimed at curbing CO2 emissions last year, in line with US efforts.

By pulling out of the Kyoto Protocol Canada would avoid paying penalties for missing its targets.



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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate change denial still runs strong in US
Washington (AFP) Nov 28, 2011
On the US political stage, skepticism and denial of climate change are as popular as ever, and experts say that world talks which opened Monday in Durban, South Africa are unlikely to turn the tide. But while a binding deal on harmful carbon output remains elusive by the world's second biggest polluter after China, some small signs of progress have emerged at the state and individual levels. ... read more


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