Climate Deal Blueprint Could Curb US Emissions and Poor Nations' Growth

A new blueprint for a global climate agreement would force the
United States to massively reduce its greenhouse gas emissions but
could also limit developing countries' attempts to grow their
economies, diplomats at the resumed global climate change talks said today.

A new draft negotiating text, prepared by the UN secretariat
at the close of two weeks of official talks in Bonn, proposes that rich
countries cut their emissions between 25-40% by 2020. The draft follows
submissions to the UN by more than 185 countries.

It also
outlines a goal of cutting global emissions by "at least 50-85% from
1990 levels by 2050". Rich countries specifically would have to cut at
least 50-95% from 1990 levels by 2050".

The new targets are more ambitious than those proposed at the Copenhagen climate summit
last December but have done little to appease developing countries.
Most are still bitter that pledges from rich countries pledges to cut
emissions have been nowhere near enough to avoid catastrophic climate change.

The
new draft text is also guaranteed to infuriate the US, which has so far
only pledged to cut its emissions 17% by 2020 on 2005 emission levels -
far less than European Union countries who have committed themselves to
20% cuts by 2020 and a 30% cut if other countries show similar
ambition. "If this text were to be adopted, then the US would find it
particularly difficult. It means they would have to do very much more,"
said one European diplomat.

No explicit mention is made in
the text's 22 pages of the controversial Copenhagen accord, the
disputed deal that inflamed many poor countries in December but was
backed strongly by the US and Britain. However, many elements of it are
included in the new text.

Developing countries said today
they were dismayed that the proposed text states that all countries
should "peak" their emissions in 2020. This would force them to move
rapidly away from fossil fuels in just a few years, something which
they say is impossible to do given their limited finances and need to
improve the lives of their people.

"Peak emissions" was
one of the most hotly disputed areas in the Copenhagen summit where
China, India and others complained that rich countries were trying to
force them to arrest their economic development, effectively handing
economic advantage to the US and industrialised countries.

European
diplomats professed surprise at the inclusion of the peak emissions
reference, even suggesting that a typographical mistake had been made.
"This is extraordinary," said one diplomat. "It has no chance of being
accepted."

Yvo de Boer, outgoing UN climate chief,
admitted the new text had "shortcomings". "It's not a final document.
This is an opportunity for countries to express their views. Elements
of the accord are now fully integrated into the new text. The language
is finding its way into the negotiating process."

He
added: "Action to reduce emissions is essential. Industrialised
countries' pledges fall well short . More stringent action cannot be
postponed."

There was little in the new wording that
suggested that rich countries would try to hold temperature rises to
1.5C, as more than half the world's countries are seeking.

As
diplomats pored over the 22-page text which must now be formally
commented on by all countries and will then be amended by the UN before
becoming a possible final negotiating text in August, the consensus
among poor countries was that it was deeply biased against them.

"They
have watered down key parts of the text. It has glossed over the
preferences of the poorest, least developed countries. It is deeply
biased against them", said Qumrul Choudhury, lead negotiator for the
group of least developed countries.

Martin Khor, director of the Geneva-based South Centre,
an international think tank for developing countries, said the text was
a step backwards. He said that the rich countries' 80-95% proposed cut
would lock in a "grossly unfair" carbon budget, effectively blocking
out the carbon space of developing countries.

In addition,
he said that the new text implied "the effective end" of the Kyoto
protocol, the only international treaty which legally commits rich
countries to cut emissions.

"This is an unravelling of the
climate regime. It is more imbalanced against developing countries'
interests than the old text and has many new negative pointsm," he said.

"This
is a one-sided text. We need something that reflects everybody. It is
not a base of negotiations," said Pablo Solon, Bolivia's ambassador to
the UN.

"The elements of the Copenhagen accord are all
there, but not by name. [The problem is] that developed countries have
so far shown no signs that they will increase their targets or provide
new money," said Kaisa Kosonen, a Finnish diplomat.

"The
US government has stonewalled every attempt to achieve a breakthrough
that would secure measures to prevent climate catastrophe," said
Friends of the Earth climate campaigner Asad Rehman.

"The
American position undermines the whole integrity of the UN framework
for tackling climate change, and risks a weak climate agreement with
voluntary pledges - leaving little or no chance of averting dangerous
global warming," he said.

"Big moves are necessary to get
these negotiations back on track. The glaring lack of political will
from the richest countries has become a signature for these talks,"
said Oxfam policy adviser Antonio Hill.

Governments now have just two weeks of full negotiating time left before a final summit in Cancun, Mexico in November.

Join Us: News for people demanding a better world


Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place.

We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference.

Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. Join with us today!

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.