‘Sign climate deal or poorest will starve’
Rising food prices caused by droughts and flooding make progress in
global negotiations on climate change more vital than ever, world
leaders are being warned.
At the annual United Nations talks on curbing greenhouse gas
emissions in the South African city of Durban, Oxfam said shortages of
rice and grain will only increase as wildfires and monsoons affect some
of the world’s poorest regions.
The charity’s call for the conference to agree to a legally binding
deal on reducing carbon releases into the atmosphere was backed by the
Archbishop of Canterbury.
He called on governments to “step up to the responsibilities only
they can exercise”.
But with the world economy teetering on recession, their calls look
likely to fall on deaf ears as it becomes harder than ever to reconcile
the 194 governments represented at the convention. Even agreements made
two years ago in Copenhagen are proving problematic. In 2009, it was
agreed that $100m (£64.7m) a year would be given to the poorest
countries suffering from global warming by 2020.
Now the world needs to agree how that money will be raised. The Kyoto
Protocol, which obliged rich nations to cut emissions and is set to
expire in 2012, is a still more serious issue.
To ensure that gas emissions peak in 2020 before falling as agreed,
the EU wants a new treaty including every major economy – including the
US, which never ratified Kyoto, and China, which fell outside the remit
when it was drawn up.
Both are resistant, as are many developing nations – who insist the
measures outlined in Kyoto are the bare minimum they will accept. And
further compounding the issue, Russia, Canada and Japan say they will
not sign up to new commitments. AFP
Oxfam activists protest close to the UN conference on climate change
in Durban.
-AFP
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