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By David Adam and John Vidal
The Guardian UK
Monday 14 April 2008
Developing world "dismayed" by lack of leadership. New deal to replace Kyoto protocol under threat.
Developing
countries, including China and India, are unwilling to sign up to a new
global climate change pact to replace the Kyoto protocol in 2012
because the rich world has failed to set a clear example on cutting
carbon emissions, according to the UN's top climate official.
Rajendra
Pachauri, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC),
said too many rich countries, including the US, had failed to take the
action needed to convince the developing nations to sign up to a deal
in Copenhagen next year that could help to stabilise global emissions.
"You
may not be able to get an agreement in one shot, let's say by
Copenhagen, that sets you on the path of stabilisation in keeping with
some kind of long-term target," Pachauri told the Guardian. "Looking at
the politics of the situation, I doubt whether any of the developing
countries will make any commitments before they have seen the developed
countries take a specific stand."
He
said there were "reasons for dismay" at the rich countries' failure to
cut carbon emissions. "This really doesn't give anybody the conviction
that those that had agreed to take action as the first step are really
serious about doing so. And in several developing countries you get the
feeling - in fact people state it very clearly - that these guys [rich
countries] are going to shove the whole burden on to our shoulders.
That's why it's necessary for the developed world to establish a
certain credibility."
Pachauri
said Germany had set a good example, with significant investment in
renewable energy, and Britain had done "quite well". The UK is on track
to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions as required under Kyoto, but
will miss a separate domestic goal to reduce carbon dioxide pollution
by 20% on 1990 levels by 2010. If emissions from aviation and shipping
are included, Britain's carbon dioxide emissions are higher now than in
1990.
Analysts
say a new global deal needs to be agreed at the Copenhagen meeting for
it to come into force by 2012, because it will take several years to be
ratified by countries. If a new deal is not in place when Kyoto
expires, then confidence in emerging carbon trading markets - seen as a
key way to reduce greenhouse gas pollution - could collapse. Schemes
such as the European emissions trading scheme, set up under Kyoto,
force polluting companies to invest in carbon credits or cleaner
technology, but rely on carbon caps continuing past 2012.
Pachauri,
who is also director general of the Energy and Resources Institute in
New Delhi, India, said: "I don't think they [China and India] will come
on board in the first round. I think they would like to see some level
of ambition on the part of the developed countries before they make any
voluntary commitments of their own."
Last
year Pachauri, an economist and environmental scientist, collected the
Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the IPCC, which it won jointly with the
American former vice-president Al Gore. The IPCC analyses the state of
climate science and issues reports that form the foundation for
international action under the UN.
Any
reluctance by China to participate in a new agreement would spell
problems for the new US president, who could sign a deal in Copenhagen
next year and then find it rejected by the US Senate. Several leading
figures in the US have said the Senate would be unlikely to pass a new
treaty that did not require China to act on its soaring carbon
emissions. All three presidential candidates have promised stronger
domestic action on global warming, and are expected to play a more
constructive role in the search for a new international treaty than the
Bush administration.
Yvo
de Boer, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change, told an IPCC meeting in Budapest this week that it would be
"very, very difficult" to reach an agreement. He warned that if the
carbon emissions of China and India continue to grow at the same pace
as their economies, mankind would be unable to prevent a critical level
of warming.
Pachauri
said there was still time for the developed countries to convince India
and China to sign a new deal next year, but that it would require a
series of "measures and actions" in the next few months.
He
urged other rich countries to follow Europe's lead and set ambitious
carbon reduction targets for the next 10 years. He said more money was
needed to help poorer countries adapt to the likely impact of global
warming, as well as "some tangible efforts to make technology transfer
a reality".
Rich
nations could help China to invest in more efficient coal power
stations, for example. "If there was low interest financing of some of
these measures, it would make it very attractive to developing
countries."
Britain
and the US have pledged support for new World Bank funds to support
climate adaptation and technology transfer, but poorer countries and
green campaigners are more sceptical, and would prefer the money to be
administered through the UN. Rich countries have failed to keep similar
promises in the past - only £90m of a promised £600m to pay for
adaptation measures had been delivered to a Global Environment Facility
fund by the end of last year.
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