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By Juliet Eilperin
The Washington Post
Sunday 13 May 2007
Negotiators
from the United States are trying to weaken the language of a climate
change declaration set to be unveiled at next month's G-8 summit of the
world's leading industrial powers, according to documents obtained
yesterday by The Washington Post.
A
draft proposal dated April 2007 that is being debated in Bonn, Germany,
this weekend by senior officials of the Group of Eight includes a
pledge to limit the global temperature rise this century to 3.6 degrees
Fahrenheit, as well as an agreement to reduce worldwide greenhouse gas
emissions to 50 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.
The United States is seeking to strike that section, the documents show.
Many
scientists have warned that an increase of more than 3.6 degrees this
century could trigger disastrous consequences such as mass extinction
of species and accelerated melting of polar ice sheets, which would
raise sea levels.
The
documents show that American officials are also trying to eliminate
draft language that says, "We acknowledge that the U.N. climate process
is the appropriate forum for negotiating future global action on
climate change." Industrial and developing countries have used the
United Nations as the forum for crafting climate agreements for years.
Neither
the White House Council on Environmental Quality nor the State
Department could be reached for comment Saturday. Since taking office
in 2001, President Bush has consistently advocated more climate
research and voluntary energy-efficiency measures as the way to address
global warming.
The
G-8 leaders are scheduled to sign off on the global warming
declaration, titled "Growth and Responsibility in the World Economy,"
during their June 6-8 summit in Heligendamm, Germany.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, along with outgoing British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, have been pushing for a strong statement on climate change
as part of the June meeting, and newly elected French President Nicolas
Sarkozy said in his acceptance speech last week that global warming is
his top priority.
The
U.S. representatives in Bonn are trying to soften the message of the
18-page climate change document by deleting sections that would call on
the industrialized world to modify activities linked to recent warming.
Philip
Clapp, who heads the advocacy group National Environmental Trust and
has read the document, said U.S. opposition to the draft declaration
could strain the country's relationship with its allies and jeopardize
the world's ability to cut greenhouse gas emissions in the coming
decade.
"The
administration is proposing to eliminate any statement that acting on
global warming is urgent and all measures that will begin to reduce
global warming pollution, including any proposal to improve the energy
efficiency of our economy," Clapp said. "A continued U.S. refusal to
take a lead in combating global warming will set back progress for
years."
Bush
administration officials are also resisting calls for efficiency
targets in the declaration, in particular a sentence that reads,
"Therefore we will increase the energy efficiency of our economies so
that energy consumption by 2020 will be at least 30 percent lower
compared to a business-as-usual scenario."
Clapp said it is difficult to predict how the negotiations will play out: "The question is, who blinks?"
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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