Panorama
 
 
 
   
 
 

APEC COUNTRIES BOLSTER UN CLIMATE CHANGE PROCESS

Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2007

 

08 Sep 2007 - Sydney, Australia – Leaders of the world's fastest growing economies attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit rejected attempts by Australia and the US to bypass the United Nations in negotiations to reduce climate damaging emissions, says WWF.

"The developing country members of APEC have said clearly that the UN is the place where a new climate change agreement will be struck,” said Greg Bourne, CEO of WWF-Australia.

"It is clear that Australia, the US, and Canada must commit to real binding cuts in emissions to enable post-2012 negotiations in Bali to come to a fruitful conclusion. Those leaders carry the responsibility for taking such targets to Bali."

In December this year, government ministers will meet in Bali, Indonesia, at a meeting of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to formally launch negotiations that will conclude in 2009 with an agreement on new binding, deeper cuts in heat-trapping climate pollution.

"This APEC Summit made clear that the UN framework is the right place to move towards deeper emission reductions," said Diane McFadzien, international climate policy expert at WWF.

"The agreement expresses support to the most vulnerable countries to adapt to climate change, but the financing can be agreed only through an extension of the Kyoto Protocol."

According to WWF, negotiations for a binding post-2012 agreement must be launched in Bali to conclude by 2009. To keep warming well below the dangerous level of 2°C, that agreement will need to ensure that global emissions peak before 2020, and that industrialized countries reduce their emissions by at least 30% by 2020 from 11000 levels.

WWF expects leaders attending a high-level climate change meeting on 24 September at the UN headquarters in New York to welcome the formal launch of the Bali negotiations.
Jacqui McArthur, Press Officer
WWF-Australia press officer
Martin Hiller, Communications Manager
WWF Global Climate Change Programme

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Developing nations refuse attempts to derail UN climate change solutions

09 Sep 2007 - The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Sydney showed that developing nations are not as easily bullied on climate change issues as US President George Bush or Australian Prime Minister John Howard may have assumed.

The Sydney Declaration, heralded by the Australian government as a success in meeting its climate change agenda, was in fact a slap in the face for the Australian and US leaders.

Explicit in the declaration is an understanding that the United Nations, and not APEC, is the place to develop any roadmap for a post-Kyoto future.

Australia, as the host of APEC, had put climate change to the top of the forum's agenda and had hoped for a declaration that pushed for solutions suited to itself and the US, outside the UN framework.

With the post-Kyoto Protocol up for discussion in Bali, Indonesia, in December, both the US and Australia had been keen to sidestep the UN process. Both countries had planned on APEC presenting a unified Pacific Rim front that would have dealt a harsh blow to global attempts to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Several days of debate and lobbying saw the developing nations refusing to budge.

Rather than being bullied into simply agreeing to essentially meaningless, aspirational goals on suitable greenhouse gas emissions, countries including China, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines held firm to their belief that the UN is the right forum to discuss real emissions targets.

By demonstrating their faith in the UN framework, developing nations have confirmed that the Kyoto Protocol is far from redundant.

The end result of the APEC deliberations is little more than a hollow statement glorifying the vague notion of aspirational goals and providing commitments to energy intensity targets, or energy efficiencies.

The Sydney Declaration, far from being a milestone, offers little.

But its weakness is also its strength. By committing to no more than aspirational goals, APEC has left the way open once again for the real debate on climate change to be heard at the UN.

The ball is now back in the court of Australia and the US as the world waits for a commitment from these nations to join other developed countries in reducing their greenhouse gas emissions.

In order to avoid catastrophic climate change greenhouse gas emissions must fall by 2015 and need to be reduced to 50% of 11000 levels by 2050.

The mood from the Sydney summit provides hope for a way forward at the upcoming Bali meeting of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), where 191 countries will start to discuss emissions targets for the next phase of the Kyoto Protocol.
Diane Mcfadzien, Climate Policy Specialist
WWF South Pacific

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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