German
chancellor Angela Merkel announces commitment to ‘decarbonise global economy’
and end extreme poverty and hunger
The Guardian, Kate Connolly in Garmisch Partenkirchen, 8 June 2015
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G7 leaders, including Angela Merkel (in pink jacket), and invitees line up for the traditional group photo at the end of the summit. Photograph: Sven Hoppe/dpa/Corbis |
The G7
leading industrial nations have agreed on tough measures to cut greenhouse
gases by phasing out the use of fossil fuels by the end of the century, the
German chancellor, Angela Merkel, has announced, in a move hailed as historic
by some environmental campaigners.
On the
final day of talks in a Bavarian castle, Merkel said the leaders had committed
themselves to the need to “decarbonise the global economy in the course of this
century”. They also agreed on a global target for limiting the rise in average
global temperatures to a maximum of 2C compared to pre-industrial levels.
Environmental
lobbyists described the announcement as a hopeful sign that plans for complete
decarbonisation could be ruled on in Paris climate talks later this year. But
they criticised the fact that leaders had stopped short of signing up to
Merkel’s proposal that they should agree on their own immediate binding
emission targets.
As host of
the summit which took place in the foothills of Germany’s largest mountain, the
Zugspitze, Merkel said the leading industrialised countries were committed to
raising $100bn (£65bn) in annual climate financing by 2020 from public and
private sources.
In their
17-page communique issued after the summit at Schloss Elmau under the slogan
“Think Ahead, Act Together”, the G7 leaders agreed to back the United Nations’
climate change panel IPCC’s recommendations to reduce global greenhouse gas
emissions at the upper end of a range of 40% to 70% by 2050, using 2010 as the
baseline.
Merkel also
announced that G7 governments had signed up to initiatives to work for an end
to extreme poverty and hunger, reducing by 2030 the number of people living in
hunger and malnutrition by 500 million, as well as improving the global
response to epidemics in the light of the Ebola crisis.
Poverty
campaigners reacted with cautious optimism to the news. The
participant countries – Germany, Britain, the US, Canada, Japan and Italy –
would work on initiatives to combat disease and help countries around the world
react to world epidemics, including a fund within the World Bank dedicated to
tackling health emergencies, Merkel announced at a press conference after the
summit formally ended on Monday afternoon.
Reacting to
the summit’s final declaration, the European Climate Foundation described the
G7 leaders’ announcement as historic, saying it signalled “the end of the
fossil fuel age” and was an “important milestone on the road to a new climate
deal in Paris”.
Samantha
Smith, a climate campaigner for the World Wildlife Fund, said: “There is only
one way to meet the goals they agreed: get out of fossil fuels as soon as
possible.”
The 350.org
campaign group put out a direct challenge to Barack Obama to shut down
long-term infrastructure projects linked to the fossil fuel industry. “If
President Obama wants to live up to the rhetoric we’re seeing out of Germany,
he’ll need to start doing everything in his power to keep fossil fuels in the
ground. He can begin by rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline and ending coal, oil
and gas development on public lands,” said May Boeve, the group’s director.
Others
called on negotiators seeking an international climate deal at Paris later this
year to make total decarbonisation of the global economy the official goal.
“A clear
long-term decarbonisation objective in the Paris agreement, such as net zero
greenhouse gas emissions well before the end of the century, will shift this
towards low-carbon investment and avoid unmanageable climate risk,” said Nigel
Topping, the chief executive of the We Mean Business coalition.
Merkel won
praise for succeeding in her ambition to ensure climate was not squeezed off
the agenda by other pressing issues. Some environmental groups said she had
established herself as a “climate hero”.
German chancellor Angela Merkel’s announcement
on G7 climate change goals
Observers
said she had succeeded where skeptics thought she would not, in winning over
Canada and Japan, the partners most reluctant ahead of negotiations, to sign up
to her targets on climate, health and poverty.
Iain Keith,
campaign director of the online activist network AVAAZ, said: “Angela Merkel
faced down Canada and Japan to say “Auf Wiedersehen” to carbon pollution and
become the climate hero the world needs.”
The ONE
campaigning and advocacy organisation called the leaders’ pledge to end extreme
poverty a “historic ambition”. Adrian Lovett, its Europe executive director,
said: “These G7 leaders have signed up ... to be part of the generation that
ends extreme poverty and hunger by 2030.” But he warned: “Schloss Elmau’s
legacy must be more than a castle in the air.
But the
global Christian relief NGO World Vision accused the leaders of failing to
deliver on their “ambitious agenda”, arguing they had been too distracted by
immediate crises, such as Russia and Greece. “Despite addressing issues like
hunger and immunisation, it was nowhere as near as ambitious as we would have
hoped for,” a spokeswoman said.
Jeremy
Farrar of the Wellcome Trust said the proposals would “transform the resilience
of global health systems”. But he said the success of the measures would depend
on the effectiveness with which they could be coordinated on a global scale and
that required fundamental reform of the World Health Organisation, something
the leaders stopped short of deciding on.
“We urge
world leaders to consider establishing an independent body within the WHO with
the authority and responsibility to deliver this,” he said.
Merkel, who
called the talks “very work-intensive and productive” and defended the format
of a summit that cost an estimated €300m, said that the participants had agreed
to sharpen existing sanctions against Russia if the crisis in Ukraine were to
escalate.
She also
said “there isn’t much time left” to find a solution to the Greek global debt
crisis but that participants were unanimous in wanting Greece to stay in the
euro.
Demonstrators,
around 3,000 of whom had packed a protest camp in the nearby village of
Garmisch Partenkirchen, cancelled the final action that had been planned to
coincide with the close of the summit.
At a
meeting in the local railway station, the head of Stop G7 Elmau, Ingrid Scherf
announced that the final rally would not go ahead “because we’re already walked
off our feet”. She denied the claims of local politicians that the group’s
demonstrations had been a flop. “I’m not at all disappointed, the turnout was
super,” she said. “And we also had the support of lots of locals.”
Only two
demonstrators were arrested, police said, one for throwing a soup dish, another
for carrying a spear.
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