During talks in New Delhi on Sunday, India, China, Brazil and South Africa agreed to submit formally their own voluntary carbon emission control plans to the United Nations by January 31.
At the climate summit in Copenhagen in December, all the big developed and developing countries agreed to limit their greenhouse gas emissions. Countries were then given until January 31 to submit their national goals on specific targets. The UN appeared to cast doubt last week on whether this deadline would be met.
However, the decision by the four countries, who call themselves the Basic group, to meet the deadline will help to put the frayed negotiations back on track.
Buyelwa Sonjica, South Africa’s minister for water and environment, said the four countries felt they had a “leadership obligation” to report as per the original deadline.
Jairam Ramesh, India’s environment minister, also called on developed countries to show their sincerity in combating climate change by fulfilling quickly their pledge to give $10bn (€7.07bn, £6.19bn) to the most vulnerable states to cope with global warming.
Click to continue reading “Open attitude’ over warming; The West should open the COP15 Purse!”
Sphere: Related ContentChaos greets new climate pact
By Stephen Collinson (AFP) – 2 hours ago
COPENHAGEN — Chaos and farce reigned at the birth of a climate accord agreed by a clique of leaders, with statesmen going missing, critics crying foul and hacks stampeding on vain hunts for Barack Obama.
Fatigue fermented a feverish cocktail of human emotion overnight Friday as the US president claimed to have staved off a default in the dying hours of global warming talks in Copenhagen.
But small nations like Cuba and Nicaragua erupted in fury at being snubbed in a game of big power diplomatic chess also involving developing giants Brazil, China and India.
Click to continue reading “AFP: Chaos greets new climate pact”
Sphere: Related ContentChaos greets new climate pact
By Stephen Collinson (AFP) – 2 hours ago
COPENHAGEN — Chaos and farce reigned at the birth of a climate accord agreed by a clique of leaders, with statesmen going missing, critics crying foul and hacks stampeding on vain hunts for Barack Obama.
Fatigue fermented a feverish cocktail of human emotion overnight Friday as the US president claimed to have staved off a default in the dying hours of global warming talks in Copenhagen.
But small nations like Cuba and Nicaragua erupted in fury at being snubbed in a game of big power diplomatic chess also involving developing giants Brazil, China and India.
Click to continue reading “AFP: Chaos greets new climate pact”
Sphere: Related ContentIt is January 2010, after years of negotiation and attrition, we now have a new Global Climate Deal. The deal will come into effect on expiry of the Kyoto protocol in 2012. Everyone is optimistic but the world is in a panic. The global temperatures have not changed much over the last 12 years, but the sun has been exhibiting some very odd behaviour. There is new emerging evidence that, besides carbon dioxide, there is another factor that is leading to the dramatic change in the climate.
It is supposed to be summer, it is cold and strangely the ice in the poles is all but gone. Places where the sun is shining, it is not producing enough heat to promote the fast growth of plants. The sea level has risen by 7 meters. The small island states have been deleted from the global map, parts of the US coast are under the sea. Mozambique, Cape Town, Mombasa, Malindi, Abidjan are no longer in the global map. Somewhere in the Kalahari, the wet conditions have given rise to an ecological boom closely mimicking the biblical garden of Aden. A natural new world order has emerged.
During the years of negotiation, politics dominated the discussions, now the word is faced with new challenges. The focus is on how to deal with; the global climate catastrophe.
Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are the same levels are higher than those recorded in the 1990. However, the temperatures have plunged to an all time low. It is no longer clear why the world has moved from the balanced and predictable, the global warming carbon dealers have all gone into hiding from angry street crowds baying for their under-performing carbon credits stocks.
The New Deal, New Kyoto or …the Copenhagen something had promised to deliver the world from the global crisis by dealing in Carbon, but now, the mechanisms have all but collapsed and the cause of the global change seems no longer to point at only Carbon dioxide as the only culprit, there are many other factors.
Click to continue reading “The New Global Climate Deal- how does it look like?”
Sphere: Related ContentAs the climate talks are about to start in Bonn, already there are signs that a deal in 2009 beyond Kyoto is far from obvious.
Brazil’s environmental minister says a “climate apartheid” between rich and poor nations could hinder a global warming deal this year. Brazil, India and China have been at the center of a global negotiation which they deem not fitting to their emerging economies.
Carlos Minc says the world “unfortunately is far from reaching an agreement” because of differences in the positions of rich and poor countries.
Brazil minister skeptical of global warming deal – International Herald Tribune.