Radio
New Zealand must have got this headline direct from minister Tim
Grosser
Climate
campaigners protest slow progress
Environmental
campaign groups have walked out of a United Nations conference on
global warming.
23
November, 2013
Several
hundred people left the talks at Poland's national stadium in Warsaw
expressing anger over the slow pace of negotiations on Thursday.
However, some of the Government negotiators indicated that a deal was
possible on contentious issues.
Campaigners
walk out of the climate change conference Warsaw.
AFP
The
talks began almost two weeks ago in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan with
an emotional plea for rapid movement from the Philippines' lead
delegate, the BBC reports.
Yeb
Sano, said it was time to "stop this madness" but his call
has fallen on deaf ears according to many civil society groups such
as Oxfam, WWF and Action Aid.
"Governments
are not doing enough," Oxfam's Celine Charveriat said as she
walked out of the talks. We need to tell them you are not allowed to
make a mockery of this process. We can't continue to watch in
silence. Enough is enough."
Earlier,
Japan surprised the meeting by announcing that it would have to
significantly revise its targets on emissions cuts, and instead of
being able to cut their carbon dioxide by 25% below 1990 levels, the
Japanese admitted they would actually rise by 3%.
Australia annoys
There
was also annoyance among negotiators from developing countries about
the attitude of Australia's new Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who has
signalled a more sceptical approach to climate issues.
But
campaigners reserved most of their wrath for Poland's government,
which gave its backing to a meeting of the coal industry in the
capital on Monday, and on Wednesday, sacked the environment minister
who was chairing the climate talks.
Participants
are trying to develop a framework for a global deal in 2015, that
would be legally binding and applicable to all.
Some
richer countries are fighting tooth and nail against the idea of a
legally binding compensation arrangement, that in their words, would
see them on the hook for every storm in every part of the world,
forever, the BBC reports.
The
talks are expected to finish on Saturday.
Warsaw
climate change talks falter as EU and developing countries clash
EU
chief chastised for expressing frustration with failure to agree
timetable on emission cuts and attempts by some to opt out
22
November, 2013
United
Nations talks on climate change were on the brink of breaking down on
Friday as a group of developing countries launched a furious attack
on the European Union over plans to set out a timetable towards a
global deal on greenhouse gas emissions.
Rows
over whether rich countries should pay compensation to the poor for
the effects of climate change, and over how governments can move to a
historic global deal on emissions, have disrupted the fortnight-long
talks, which have been marked by walk-outs and recriminations.
As
the talks dragged on into the night, the EU's climate chief, Connie
Hedegaard, expressed frustration with the failure to agree a
timetable on emissions cuts, and with attempts by a small number of
developing countries to opt out of the proposal.
In
a dramatic intervention late on Friday, Venezuela's head of
delegation, representing a group of "like-minded countries"
including China, India, Saudi Arabia and Malaysia, accused the EU of
"damaging seriously the atmosphere of confidence and trust in
this process". Claudia Salerno said: "We are shocked by the
brazen attack against our group by Hedegaard – it is incredible
that she has chosen to accuse our group of blocking progress."
Talks
had been inching towards a conclusion, with participants reporting
"productive" meetings and "modest progress". The
negotiations were meant to lay the groundwork for a crunch meeting in
Paris in late 2015, at which governments are supposed to sign a new
global treaty on climate change, to come into force from 2020, which
would be the first to include commitments on emissions from both
developed and developing nations.
Before
this can happen, it is crucial thatall countries set out national
targets on emissions well in advance of the Paris talks, so that
other participants can assess the targets – which would lay out
cuts into the 2020s and beyond – and can see whether they are
sufficiently ambitious to head off dangerous levels of climate
change.
The
US, the EU and many other rich and poor countries see such a
programme as essential. But as the talks dragged on into extra time
in Poland's national football stadium on Friday night, there was
still no consensus.
Salerno's
outburst underlined the fractious nature of the talks, and the new
divisions between some rapidly emerging economies, some of them with
large fossil fuel interests, and other developing countries that have
more to lose from the effects of climate change.
The
spokesman for Hedegaard said some countries wanted to portray the
talks as divided between the developed and developing world. "It's
not like that. It is the willing versus the unwilling."
The
EU and US are also anxious to ensure that rapidly growing economies –
especially China, which is now the world's biggest emitter of C02 and
second biggest economy – take on responsibilities for their
emissions, which they did not under the Kyoto protocol.
In
another strand, the highly contentious issue of "loss and
damage", by which developing countries stricken by the effects
of severe weather would receive assistance, was moving towards
compromise.
That
would involve a mechanism for channelling funds to vulnerable
countries when they suffer natural disasters related to global
warming. This is very different from the "compensation"
that some developing countries want from the rich world, and which
rich countries have ruled out, but they may accept this compromise as
it would allow them to receive funding when disaster strikes.
Ed
Davey, the UK's energy and climate secretary, said: "I think we
will be able to reconcile these views."
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