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WORLD / Kyoto Protocol |
EU threatens to boycott US climate talks(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-12-13 19:57 Bali - European nations on Thursday threatened to boycott US-led climate talks next month unless Washington accepts a range of numbers for negotiating deep reductions of global-warming emissions at a UN conference in Bali. The move raised the stakes as delegates entered final-hour talks on Bali aimed at launching negotiations for a successor to the Kyoto Protocol. The United States, Japan and several other governments refuse to accept language in a draft document suggesting that industrialized nations consider cutting emissions by 25 percent to 40 percent by 2020, saying specific targets would limit the scope of future talks. The European Union and others say the figures reflect the measures scientists say are needed to rein in global warming and head off predictions of rising sea levels, worsening floods and droughts, and the extinction of plant and animal species. "No result in Bali means no Major Economies Meeting," said Sigmar Gabriel, top EU environment official from Germany, referring to a series of separate climate talks initiated by US President Bush in September. "This is the clear position of the EU. I do not know what we should talk about if there is no target." The US invited 16 other economies, including European countries, Japan, China and India, to discuss a program of what are expected to be nationally determined, voluntary cutbacks in greenhouse gas emissions. The Bush administration views the major economies process as the main vehicle for determining future steps by the US - and it hopes by others - to slow emissions. But environmentalists said the US was trying to undermine the UN process. The talks in Bali are scheduled to wrap up Friday. |
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