It
says a lot that there was nothing in the media I have been scanning
to tell me these talks were going on
Bonn
climate talks end in discord and disappointment
Climate
crisis is not caused by lack of options and solutions, but lack of
political action, says Greenpeace spokeswoman
25
May, 2012
The
latest round of international climate change talks finished on Friday
in discord and disappointment, with some participants concerned that
important progress made last year was being unpicked.
At
the talks, countries were supposed to set out a workplan on
negotiations that should result in a new global climate treaty, to be
drafted by the end of 2015 and to come into force in 2020. But
participants told the Guardian they were downbeat, disappointed and
frustrated that the decision to work on a new treaty – reached
after marathon late-running talks last December in Durban – was
being questioned.
China
and India, both rapidly growing economies with an increasing share of
global emissions, have tried to delay talks on such a treaty. Instead
of a workplan for the next three years to achieve the objective of a
new pact, governments have only managed to draw up a partial agenda.
"It's incredibly frustrating to have achieved so little,"
said one developed country participant. "We're stepping
backwards, not forwards."
Connie
Hedegaard, the EU climate chief, said: "The world cannot afford
that a few want to backtrack from what was agreed in Durban only five
months ago. Durban was – and is – a delicately balanced package
where all elements must be delivered at the same pace. It is not a
pick and choose menu. It is very worrisome that attempts to backtrack
have been so obvious and time-consuming in the Bonn talks over the
last two weeks."
There
was also little progress on the key issue of the financing by rich
countries of actions in the developing world. Meeting in Bonn,
negotiators and officials from around the world haggled over the
set-up of a 'Green Climate Fund' that would channel cash from the
developed world to poorer countries, to help them cut greenhouse gas
emissions and cope with the effects of climate change.
However,
they agreed much of the detail that will be needed to extend the
Kyoto protocol – currently the world's only legally binding treaty
on emissions cuts – beyond 2012 when its current provisions expire.
That extension should be finalised at a conference in Doha, Qatar,
this November – but may not be if the EU does not see sufficient
progress in negotiations on the proposed new post-2020 treaty.
Chrisiana
Figueres, the top climate change official at the United Nations, who
presided over the two weeks of talks, said: "Work at this
session has been productive. Countries can now press on to ensure
elements are in place to adopt the Doha amendment to the Kyoto
protocol. I am pleased to say that the Bonn meeting produced more
clarity on the protocols's technical and legal details and options to
enable a smooth transition between the two commitment periods of the
protocol."
However,
the only major developed countries that have agreed to continue the
Kyoto protocol are those of the European Union. Canada and Japan have
dropped out, and the US never ratified the 1997 accord.
The
fortnight-long talks in Bonn followed an unexpected last-ditch
agreement in December at a meeting in Durban, when countries resolved
to spend the next three to four years thrashing out the terms of a
new global treaty on climate change and emissions cuts, which would
come into force from 2020. Such a treaty would follow on from the
Kyoto protocol and from the Copenhagen pledges made at a 2009 summit,
in which both developed and developing countries agreed for the first
time jointly to curb emissions by 2020. Those pledges do not have the
legal force of a full treaty, however, and have been shown in a
variety of studies to be inadequate to stave off dangerous levels of
climate change.
One
of the main tasks for the fortnight-long meeting in Bonn was to flesh
out a programme of work towards a new post-2020 treaty. That has been
partially achieved, but participants said more needed to be done to
draft a clear negotiating timetable. The last major international
treaty on the climate that had full legal force - the Kyoto protocol
- took five years to negotiate, so the current round of talks will be
on a tight deadline if they are to finish in a fully drafted
agreement by the end of 2015, as planned.
Countries
also discussed at Bonn whether they should try to cut emissions
faster than currently planned within the next eight years. That
question will be discussed further in the November talks. Green
groups were pleased that the possibility of strengthening the 2020
targets was still on the table. However, some participants worried
that it could prove a distraction to the difficult task of crafting a
whole new post-2020 treaty by 2015.
Celine
Charveriat, advocacy and campaigns director at Oxfam, said: "No
progress was made to deliver the financial support that the world's
poorest and most vulnerable need to deal with the growing impacts of
climate change. It is now vital that, at the next UN climate summit
in Qatar in November, rich countries commit to an initial US$10-15bn
to the Green Climate Fund between 2013 and 2015, as part of a broader
financial package.
"At
a time when ambitious emission reductions are more urgent than ever,
developed countries in Bonn made no progress to close the gap between
current climate targets and what is required to avoid the worst of
climate change. Developed countries must improve on their current low
level of ambition and accept higher reduction targets no later than
at the Qatar summit."
Tove
Maria Ryding, coordinator for climate policy at Greenpeace
International, said: "Here in Bonn we've clearly seen that the
climate crisis is not caused by lack of options and solutions, but
lack of political action. It's absurd to watch governments sit and
point fingers and fight like little kids while the scientists explain
about the terrifying impacts of climate change and the fact that we
have all the technology we need to solve the problem while creating
new green jobs."
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