Deutsche Welle, 11 November 2013
Representatives
from almost 200 nations are gathering in Warsaw to debate the details of a
global warming pact that is due to be agreed on in 2015. The UN climate talks
are not expected to flesh out any major decisions.
The 19th conference of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change will
try to commit countries to a timeline to declare their emissions goals post
2020. The European Union is among the major key players wanting governments to
present their offers in September next year, at another UN climate summit
hosted by secretary general Ban Ki-moon.
The
agreement is meant to be concluded in 2015 in Paris and to come into effect by
2020.
"In
Warsaw, we must agree to prepare strong pledges for the 2015 deal and to step
up emissions cuts over the rest of this decade," said EU Climate
Commissioner Connie Hedegaard.
One of the
major stumbling blocks is financing the cuts in emissions, and how poorer
countries can realistically shift their industries to cleaner energy sources
and adapt to a shifting climate. During the talks in Warsaw, vulnerable states
such as small island nations are expected to raise their demands for
compensation from climate impacts, such as rising seas and droughts.
During
climate talks in Copenhagen in 2009, developed countries agreed to scale up
climate financing to $100 billion annually by 2020, but current flows fall very
well short of this. Oxfam, a British charity, estimates that around $16 billion
in contributions have been announced by richer countries in 2013, some of it as
loans.
Key details
of the 2015 deal are still to be worked out, including whether or not to make
part or all of it legally binding, and when and in what form governments will
present their offers of emissions cuts after 2020.
European
Commission president Jose Manuel Barosso says he is concerned about the impact
on competitiveness on the bloc if it firmly acts on climate change when others
do not. It comes as the EU prepares to unveil a new chunk of green energy law
next year. Barosso also dismissed those who deny that climate change is real.
"If
it's not more urgent [than the economic crisis], it's more important because
it's an essential threat to our planet. We should not relax our efforts. For
that we need a global commitment. In Europe, we have been front-runners,"
said Barosso, speaking to the news agency Reuters.
Poland
under scrutiny
Coal-reliant host nation Poland has come under criticism from climate activists, who have
questioned it presiding over a coal conference at the same time as the UN
talks.
On
Saturday, Greenpeace activists projected a slogan (seen above) on a cooling
tower of Belchatow Power Station, Europe's largest coal-fired power plant,
around 160 kilometers south-west of Warsaw.
For its
part, Poland has emphasized collective action, rather than leadership, on
emissions reductions, and says the EU should rethink its approach.
"This
tendency of some European politicians stressing that the EU is a leader is in
my opinion counterproductive," said Polish environment minister Marcin
Korolec. He said EU efforts enabled bigger polluters to leave the hard work to
a bloc that emits just 11 percent of global greenhouse gases.
jr/dr (Reuters, AP)
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