Deutsche Welle, 9 November 2012
Australia
has announced it will sign up for a second round of the Kyoto Protocol, an
environmental protection treaty. Australia would become the first major
non-European country to sign the new "Kyoto 2" phase.
"Australia
is ready to join a second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol,"
Climate Minister Greg Combet announced on Friday.
So far,
only the European Union and several smaller economies have signalled a
willingness to agree to a new phase of emission-cutting pledges.
The Kyoto
Protocol, which was negotiated in 1997, is the first global treaty to set
binding obligations on wealthy countries to cut emissions.
The
so-called "Kyoto 2" agreement commits to a 5 percent cut in carbon
emissions by 2020 based on 2000 levels.
Australiais
among the world's worst per-capita polluters, with a heavy reliance on coal
mining and exports with most of its electricity coming from coal-fired power
stations.
Combet's
announcement comes ahead of annual negotiations under the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) which will take place in Doha, Qatar in
December.
The big
issue is renewing commitments under Kyoto after the first round of cuts expires
on December 31, although agreement on a new globally-binding deal is not
expected until 2015 and will not come into force until 2020.
"From
2020 we expect all countries - including the United States, the European Union,
China, Japan, India, Indonesia and South Korea - will be part of a new
agreement to reduce emissions," Combet said. "This will bring all
countries onto the same legal platform to reduce emissions."
Hours after
Combet's announcement, New Zealand announced it will not sign up for the second
phase, but denied it was withdrawing from Kyoto.
hc/mz (AFP, dpa)
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