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US Planning to Weaken Copenhagen Climate Deal, Europe Warns
Exclusive: Key differences between the US and Europe could undermine a new worldwide treaty on global warming to replace Kyoto, sources say
Europe has clashed with the US Obama administration over climate change in a potentially damaging split that comes ahead of crucial political negotiations on a new global deal to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
Ban Ki-moon speaks at the Bali climate change conference in 2007. The UN secretary general told the Guardian on Monday that negotiations ahead of Copenhagen had stalled and need to 'get moving'. (Photograph: Adek Berry/AFP) The
Guardian understands that key differences have emerged between the US
and Europe over the structure of a new worldwide treaty on global
warming. Sources on the European side say the US approach could
undermine the new treaty and weaken the world's ability to cut carbon
emissions.
The treaty will be negotiated in December at a UN meeting in Copenhagen and is widely billed as the last chance to save the planet from a temperature rise of 2C or higher, which the EU considers dangerous.
"If we end up with a weaker framework with less stringent compliance, then that is not so good for the chances of hitting 2C," a source close to the EU negotiating team said.
News of the split comes amid mounting concern that the Copenhagen talks will not make the necessary progress.
Ban Ki-moon, the UN general secretary, told the Guardian last night that negotiations had stalled and need to "get moving".
Ahead of an unprecedented UN climate change summit of almost 100 heads of government in New York next week, Moon said the leaders held in their hands "the future of this entire humanity".
He said: "We are deeply concerned that the negotiation is not making much headway [and] it is absolutely and crucially important for the leaders to demonstrate their political will and leadership."
The dispute between the US and Europe is over the way national carbon reduction targets would be counted. Europe has been pushing to retain structures and systems set up under the Kyoto protocol, the existing global treaty on climate change. US negotiators have told European counterparts that the Obama administration intends to sweep away almost all of the Kyoto architecture and replace it with a system of its own design.
The issue is highly sensitive and European officials are reluctant to be seen to openly criticise the Obama administration, which they acknowledge has engaged with climate change in a way that President Bush refused to. But they fear the US move could sink efforts to agree a robust new treaty in Copenhagen.
The US distanced itself from Kyoto under President Bush because it made no demands on China, and the treaty remains political poison in Washington. European negotiators knew the US would be reluctant to embrace Kyoto, but they hoped they would be able to use it as a foundation for a new agreement.
If Kyoto is scrapped, it could take several years to negotiate a replacement framework, the source added, a delay that could strike a terminal blow at efforts to prevent dangerous climate change. "In Europe we want to build on Kyoto, but the US proposal would in effect kill it off. If we have to start from scratch then it all takes time. It could be 2015 or 2016 before something is in place, who knows."
According to the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), world emissions need to peak by 2015 to give any chance of avoiding a 2C rise.
Europe is unlikely to stand up to the US, the source added. "I am not sure that the EU actually has the guts for a showdown and that may be exactly the problem." The US plan is likely to anger many in the developing world, who are keen to retain Kyoto because of the obligations it makes on rich countries.
Under Kyoto, greenhouse gas reductions are subject to an international system that regulates the calculation of emissions, the purchase of carbon credits and contribution of sectors such as forestry. The US is pushing instead for each country to set its own rules and to decide unilaterally how to meet its target.
The US is yet to offer full details on how its scheme might work, though a draft "implementing agreement" submitted to the UN by the Obama team in May contained a key clause that emissions reductions would be subject to "conformity with domestic law".
Legal experts say the phrase is designed to protect the US from being forced to implement international action it does not agree with. Farhana Yamin, an environmental lawyer with the Institute of Development Studies, who worked on Kyoto, said: "It seems a bit backwards. The danger is that the domestic tail starts to wag the international dog."
The move reflects a "prehistoric" level of debate on climate change in the wider US, according to another high-ranking European official, and anxiety in the Obama administration about its ability to get a new global treaty ratified in the US Senate, where it would require a two-thirds majority vote. The US has not ratified a major international environment treaty since 1992 and President Clinton never submitted the Kyoto protocol for approval, after a unaminous Senate vote indicated it would be rejected on economic grounds.
The US proposal for unilateral rule-setting "is all about getting something through the Senate," the source said. "But I don't have the feeling that the US has thought through what it means for the Copenhagen agreement."
The move could open loopholes for countries to meet targets without genuine carbon cuts, they said. Europe is not concerned that the US would exploit such loopholes, but it fears that other countries might.
The US State Department, which handles climate change, would not comment.
Stuart Eizenstat, who negotiated Kyoto for the US, said: "There has been a sea change in US attitudes [on climate] and the new president is deeply committed on this issue. But the EU needs to understand the limitations in the US. The reality is that is it impossible for my successor to negotiate something in Copenhagen beyond that which Congress will give the administration in domestic cap-and-trade legislation."
Nigel Purvis, who also worked on the US Kyoto team, said: "It's not welcome news in Europe but the Kyoto architecture shouldn't have any presumed status. Many decisions were taken when the United States was not at the negotiating table. Importing the Kyoto architecture into a new agreement would leave it vulnerable to charges of repackaging."
He denied the US move would weaken the agreement. "It is important for the US to negotiate an agreement it can join, because another agreement that did not involve the United States would set back efforts to protect the climate. Is it weaker to have a system that applies to more countries? I would argue not."
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20 Comments so far
Show AllThe US will weaken the agreement. The strategies are opposed and in direct conflict.
The only way recent US moves make any sense is as a grab for global domination through energy monopoly.
The wars in the Middle East and the bases in Columbia cannot be to get hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons can be bought. The wars keep them from shipping elsewhere. Then the US can threaten to cut off Europe, Russia, China, India, Brazil, and anyone else who might approach sovereignty.
Solving the energy crisis detracts from plans for domination.
barmadu: You are one of the few on CD who gets this exactly right. The achilles heel of this plan is local people implementing free public transit in their local communities until the autosprawl system is dismantled. Join us.
http://freepublictransit.org
"The move reflects a "prehistoric" level of debate on climate change in the wider US, according to another high-ranking European official..."
Yup, that's the USA; positively Neanderthal...
So what else is new under the sun?
Bush Light strikes again.
Considering Europes accomplishment under Carbon Tax reduction. its fairly amusing for them to warn anyone of anything.
There isn't debate on Climate Change. The debate concerns if its man made or not. But far more important, if it is man made what possible solutions are available to us? The answer at the moment is none.
???
i'll second that... and raise you.
??? ???
Exactly, and Henry's remarks were exactly what thee European Rep. was talking about when he refered to the "prehistoric" discussion in the US.
Henry, Please provide us with a CV showing you qualifications in atmospheric physics, climatology and paleoclimatology.
No one needs a degree to figure out what is happening.
It is just common sense.
If Henry wants to pretend that we are not collectively responsible the let him be.
It is a very painful subject for everyone and we all deal with it in our own way.
Remember the 5 stages of grief:
Denial...Anger...Bargining...Depression and Acceptance
We are all at different stages on that list.
Well, i know i'm late in the day, i've been working a lot and not spending much time in the comment threads of CD...
Poor Henry. He thinks there is "debate" about whether climate destabilization has been caused by humans.
Henry, i STRONGLY encourage you to read through every article about the Earth's climate published in Science magazine (the most prestigious scientific journal in the United States) and in Nature magazine (the most prestigious scientific journal published in Britain) over the past ten years.
Very seriously, you are very seriously confused about the status of scientific "debate" about the causes of climate disruption.
Essentially, THERE IS NO DEBATE. There is excellent reason why two posters here responded to your post with ??????????????????
Obama will live up to the level of disappointment we have come to expect. I'm sure the "Made in USA" plan will somehow state that coal from Mountain Top Removal projects is clean and green! Maybe he'll also score some points with Stephen Harper by declaring that Athabasca Tar Sand oil is good for the earth and perfectly safe as well. Bill Hicks was right when he said that we're nothing more than a "virus with shoes"!
THE most deadly threat to life on this planet, whether through climate change, other pollutions, war, or indifference is the effect of religion. People do not care (especially in the United States of America where ostentatious consumption is seen as a form of Grace and/or righteousness) because they believe some god is on their side. The percentage of people in the U.S.A. who feel "deeply" connected to some arrogant MALE god is a good indicator of our coming doom.
Birdbrain Alley
Yes, but if they all rise up and ascend at Rapture Hour then perhaps, like kicking out the last dregs and hanger-ons from the party, it might be possible for the rest of us to finally clean up the place?
Quite frankly, The USA is an albatross, hanging from the neck of the real world.
I apologise for being pessimistic but I have followed the global warming warnings now for 29 years.
I readily admit to having no expertise in the field other than never getting a reasonable answer to one question. I am able however to analyse the tone and substance of the arguments and tell which have a bias of emotion and denial.
I am sad to say that as the years have progressed the numbers of plausible deniers of the human influence on global warming have steadily decreased. From the information I have filtered out I understand it is already too late to prevent a chain reaction of heating and transformation of the planet.
The geopolitical events precipitated by all this may, of course, generate sufficient nuclear winter as to counteract some or all warming but in that scenario it is hard to imagine what lifeforms beyond bacteria might survive. Even cockroaches that might be hardened and adaptable to radiation don't survive the cold.
That question with yet no reasonable answer is this: Given that for every action there is some kind of reaction, that we have natural greenhouse gases and a resulting greenhouse effect that insulates Earth, that we are adding to that insulating layer by contributing more greenhouse gases, why do we expect there will no change?
The usual response is something like "the oceans will absorb the CO2". OK but then they will become more acidic and affect plankton growth. Plankton produce half the Oxygen generated on Earth so that seems like a slippery slope, does it not?
What is certain is that Earth will reach an equilibrium of some sort, but whether that will include humans and other life forms seems increasingly in doubt.
Earth, you might want to get your affairs and papers in order.
i do not think of it as "pessimism" but simply truth.
You cite 29 years. As i've noted here before, in 1971 i read scientist Barry Commoner's book "The Closing Circle" that he wrote in response to the first Earth Day.
Commoner addressed (among other human disruptions of the living Earth) global warming caused by humans releasing fossilized carbon into the atmosphere. The basic science is quite simple. Carbon molecules retain heat more efficiently than other constituent molecules of air. As we increase carbon in the air, the air retains heat more efficiently. IT IS NOT COMPLICATED, IT IS NOT CONTROVERSIAL.
So i've been watching this arrive for almost 40 years now. i've never driven a car, and flew once in an airplane just to demonstrate that i was not reluctant to fly based on fear, but on the physics of atmospheric heat retention.
The fact that Commoner's book is not recognized as a classic of popular science writing that transformed our society and our economy, is testimony to the POWER and INFLUENCE of the energy and automobile industries.
And i agree - the tipping point HAS BEEN PASSED. Whatever steps are taken now, weak or strong, the disruption that has been unleashed by the billions of tons - BILLIONS OF TONS - of carbon that we have pumped into the atmosphere, WILL CRASH civilization, may wipe out humanity, and may well cause one of Earth's "great extinction events", eliminating 90 or 99 percent of all species.
Debate debate debate, blah blah blah...
Of course i do not have ABSOLUTE SCIENTIFIC CERTAINTY about exactly how events will play out, so i continue growing food in my city, working to promote democracy, accountability, revolution...
Good for you!
You are an example of a human who awake to the wonderful possibilities of life.
Most folks are somewhat asleep. They are always reacting to life instead of taking appropriate action when it is required.
Thanks you for not driving a car.
I gave up driving 10 years ago and use my bike and public transportation. It seemed like a drop in the bucket but I was hopeful that it would inspire others to do the same.
Heck! You can't even get people to car pool much less give up their cars!
Cars are wonderful inventions. They seemed like a good idea at the time.
They are like chariots of the gods. You can cruise across the landscape in your climate controlled environment listening to wonderful music. I love cars but unfortunately they are destroying the planet.
But like lemmings we are putting the pedal to the metal and driving off the cliff.
As that wonderful philosopher Kurt Vonnegut would say "And so it goes".
In the meantime be happy and I know that you are enjoying your wee garden.
Webwalk, thanks for the info on Commoner -I see he is 92 now and ran for President in 1980.
I must assume he would not resonate well with Wall Street or corporate power?
I have a lot of respect for your lifestyle choice and no, nothing in life is certain.
Musing though on your last three paragraphs and given innate human weaknesses such as ego, greed and the need for embracing and shaping religion for power, it would seem inevitable that the rise and fall of humanity would play out this way -unless prematurely interrupted by some globally catastrophic event like nuclear radiation or inescapable disease. I wonder if somehow this has happened before?
Nanoo
Agreements and treaties, change I can believe in. What the hell, the rest of the world governments ought to know by now how the US honors or more likely doesn't honor agreements and treaties. Really, why waste your time.
US plans = Corporate plans.
We will make money right up to the time when we needlessly lapse into chaos and anarchy.
Whomever is frozen under a mile of ice with the most toys, wins.