'Rich states must pay up to save climate agreement' -EU
By Suzanne GOLDENBERG,
The EU set aside diplomatic language and issued a bare-boned
challenge to industrialised countries to come up with the cash
developing countries need to deal with climate change today.
The unusually blunt language from the European commission's
president, José Manuel Barroso, on what was needed for an agreement on
global warming at Copenhagen was delivered as leaders began arriving in
Pittsburgh for a G20 summit of major economies.
In a speech at Pittsburgh University, Barroso said the industrialised
economies would have to make significant reductions in emissions as well
as make "a credible financial commitment" to help developing states
obtain new greener technology. "In other words, no money, no deal," he
said.
But Barroso also said there would be no blank cheques for rapidly
developing countries such as India, China and Brazil which need the new
technology if they are to avoid huge increases in future greenhouse gas
emissions.
"If you are serious about the challenge of cutting emissions, we will
be there to help, including with financial support. But we need
developing countries to contribute to mitigation," he said. "In other
words, no action, no money."
Barroso was also scathing about the red tape surrounding the
negotiations. "The text that is currently on the table contains 200
pages with a feast of alternatives and a forest of square brackets," he
said. "If we do not sort this out, it risks becoming the longest suicide
note in history."
Barroso's comments cut to the heart of the standoff between
industrialised countries and the emerging economies. An EU official said
the comments did not apply to the world's poorest states, which will be
most vulnerable to climate change. Funding for those states was "a
given".
America and others have been pressing hard for the newly emerging
countries to make firm commitments to reduce their future emissions.
In his speech to the UN climate change summit this week, Barack Obama
delivered a pointed message that the rapidly industrialised states would
also have to curb emissions as part of a climate change deal.
The pressure appears to be getting results. China and India earlier
this week did offer some pledges of action on climate change, but both
fell short on specifics.
By making a conditional offer of assistance, Barroso was seen as
trying to get them to commit to more specific action.
Environmental organisations praised the statement for its clarity in
a negotiation process that has stalled partly because of its own
complexity. "They've really got to the crux of the issue: no money, no
deal," said Liz Gallagher, the director of climate finance policy for
the Catholic charity Cafod.
Barroso's effort to knock heads together may not produce the desired
effect. India's environment minister, Jairam Ramesh said it was "not
very helpful".
India's climate change envoy, Shyam Saran, agreed with Barroso on the
importance of unlocking climate finance, but he said India would not
move further on reducing its own emissions.
"We will not be able to talk direct reduction targets of the kind
which developed countries are obliged to take," he told reporters.
"However that does not mean that India is not taking a number of
significant mitigation actions itself."
Barroso's tough talk could also further complicate the discussions on
climate finance at the G20. India and China have fought hard to try to
prevent the G20 leaders from even taking up the issue of climate finance
in their meetings today.
Barroso did not address the other fault line in the negotiations
towards a climate change deal at Copenhagen: who will pay to protect the
poorest countries that will bear the brunt of climate change. Diplomats
say the EU is hoping to build trust by putting together a package of
short-term financing to shield these countries from climate change.
.-The Guardian,UK
|