G-8 leaders aim ambitious environmental goals
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Leaders of the world's most powerful economies pledged to seek huge
cuts in their greenhouse gas emissions at a summit in Italy on
Wednesday.
The Group of Eight leaders said they would "join a global response to
achieve a 50 percent reduction in global emissions by 2050 and to a goal
of an aggregate 80 percent or more reduction by developed countries by
that date."
The goal mirrors one adopted by the U.S. House of Representatives
last month.
Despite the G-8 leaders' pledge to cut emissions, developing nations
may not follow suit - and G-8 leaders stopped short of calling on them
to set specific targets.
Instead, they "called upon major emerging economies to undertake
quantifiable actions to collectively reduce emissions significantly
below business-as-usual by a specified year," the White House said.
U.S. President Obama joined the leaders of Britain, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan and Russia in the mountain town of L'Aquila, which
was devastated by a 6.3-magnitude quake in April, for the meeting.
Chinese President Hu Jintao was expected to attend the summit but
returned home Wednesday to deal with deadly ethnic clashes in China's
remote western Xinjiang province that have prompted a massive security
clampdown.
China's problems add to a list of global concerns overshadowing the
talks, including the recent political turmoil in Iran and North Korea's
nuclear ambitions, both of which have prompted renewed talk of major
economic sanctions.
Though Hu was forced to return home, representatives of the other
"plus five" group of emerging economic giants, including Brazil, India,
South Africa and Mexico, are to attend Thursday's session, with
discussions looking ahead to a major environmental summit in Copenhagen,
Denmark. A senior Chinese official, Dai Binnguo, is standing in for Hu
in Italy.
After the summit's first session, Obama and other leaders toured the
area damaged by the quake, which killed about 300 people and left 45,000
homeless.
Obama is expected to push for further international financial
stimulus packages at the summit, reflecting continued concerns over the
global economic crisis despite massive government spending to halt the
downturn.
The summit's host, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, is
probably hoping that the three-day event will help draw the spotlight
away from recent scandals that have prompted questions over his
suitability to lead.
Prone to gaffes and facing a divorce from his wife of 19 years, the
Italian prime minister is being investigated over allegations that he
paid for sex, claims that he has repeatedly denied.
Berlusconi has made a show of moving the summit from its original
venue on the island of Sardinia to L'Aquila, in the mountains of central
Italy, as a gesture of support for the region.
A massive security operation has been put in place around the town,
which is still hit by regular aftershocks. Italy claimed last week that
it had arrested six members of a left-wing terrorist group who were
plotting an attack on the summit.
Meanwhile, Pope Benedict XVI launched his own verbal assault on
global capitalism ahead of the meeting, lambasting "grave deviations and
failures" and calling for a "profoundly new way of understanding
business enterprise." The pope, who is due to meet Obama on the summit's
sidelines, challenged bankers to turn away from the practices blamed for
bringing about the global economic crisis and instead use their power to
help the world create wealth and economic development.
"Above all, the intention to do good must not be considered
incompatible with the effective capacity to produce goods," Benedict
said.
After a G-20 summit of leading powers in London, England, in April
that critics claim was little more than a photo opportunity despite
pledges of global economic cooperation, some have questioned what
tangible gains can be made from this week's meeting.
Ahead of the summit, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown warned that
the financial crisis is far from over, echoing White House calls for
further economic stimulus - something that is likely to meet resistance
among European leaders.
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who is campaigning for
greater environmental awareness, said Tuesday that the G-8 was expected
to set out a framework for tackling climate change that would be carried
forward to the Copenhagen meeting.
CNN
MEF statement on 'Economy and Climate Change'
The meetings in MEF format have approved the statement by the leaders
of the Major Economies Forum countries on energy and the climate change
issue, which has been described as one of the major challenges of our
day.
Reasserting the targets and principles set out in the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change and citing the statement adopted in Toyako,
Japan, in July last year, the MEF leaders have agreed C02 emission
reduction targets setting out to halve them by 2050, and a commitment to
restricting global warming to 2 degrees Centigrade.
Particular attention must be paid to the poor and developing
countries, which must be brought into the process of fighting climate
change, not least via aid that fosters their development and the
adoption of environment-compatible technologies.
The MEF leaders have restated their intention of meeting again, at
the UN Climate Change Conference Copenhagen in December, to travel
further along this same road.
Global Agenda
Meeting in the G8 plus G5 countries plus Egypt format, the Heads of
State and Government have approved the global agenda: new rules for the
economy and the finance market, a resumption of the granting of credit,
getting the Doha talks back off the ground and a strong joint drive to
help the poor countries.
In their agreed statement, the Leaders renew their pledge to work
together to achieve a global recovery that will also be "green," resting
on sound, lasting foundations for "sustainable, balanced, inclusive"
growth.
The need to embark on the Global Legal Standard road to a finance
market with tougher rules and watchdog bodies is accompanied by the need
to begin drawing up an "exit strategy" out of the extraordinary measures
adopted to counter the crisis.
Courtesy: G8 official website |
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