My Account |  Sign-in  |  Sign-up & Rates  |  Advertise  |  Feedback
Google
  Directory
News
Jobs
Docs & Videos
Travel Deals
Leads & Opportunities
CRM & eMarketing
Your Contacts
 
Search for News:
Keyword, Title, Summary, Tags:
News Category:
News Region:
News Type:
Services Menu
Front Page
This Week's News
This Month's News
News by Keywords
News By Category
News By Region
News
Put our News on your site
Monetize your web site

Subscribe To Newsletter(s)


Post News

BLOGS AND EVENTS
Retail Travel Training
Events
Selected News Posting
Email News Posting | Print News Posting | Post Comment

Forty leaders plan to attend climate talks: U.N.

294 days 15 hours ago
About 40 world leaders plan to go to Copenhagen next month to boost the chances of clinching a U.N. climate deal, the United Nations said Friday as preparatory talks wound down with scant progress.

Developing nations in Barcelona accused rich countries of seeking to lower ambitions for an 190-nation deal in Copenhagen with suggestions that up to an extra year may be needed to tie up details of a legally binding treaty.

Inviting world leaders to the end of the Copenhagen meeting on December 7-18 could help overcome disputes, said Yvo de Boer, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, on the final day of the week-long Barcelona talks.

"My understanding is that 40 heads of state have indicated their intention to be present," he said. They include British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy as well as leaders of African and Caribbean nations.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is considering attending, a spokesman said in Berlin. U.S. President Barack Obama is among those undecided.

Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen has not formally invited leaders to the talks, currently due to be limited to environment ministers. "There is no official figure" of how many leaders will come, a Danish spokesman said.

The 175-nation Barcelona meeting made little progress toward a deal but narrowed options on helping the poor to adapt to climate change, sharing technology and cutting emissions from deforestation, delegates said.

RICH-POOR SPLIT

The meeting exposed a deep rich-poor divide about sharing out the burden of curbs on greenhouse gas emissions meant as part of a worldwide assault to avert droughts, wildfires, extinctions and rising seas.

"Developed countries are acting as a brake toward any meaningful progress" said Lumumba Stanislaus Di-Aping of Sudan, chair of the Group of 77 and China, representing poor nations. African nations boycotted some talks Tuesday in protest.

"We do not have the option of delay," said Dessima Williams of Grenada, representing small island states which say they risk being swamped by rising sea levels. She said a Copenhagen deal had to be legally binding and rejected talk of a delay.

De Boer said Copenhagen "can and must be the turning point in the international fight against climate change" but said time was too short to seal a full legal treaty in 2009.

He said Copenhagen should at least set 2020 greenhouse gas emissions goals for all rich nations, agree actions by the poor to slow their rising emissions and agree ways to raise billions in funding and mechanisms to oversee funds.

"I believe that the U.S. can commit to a number in Copenhagen," de Boer said.

A U.S. climate change bill cleared its first hurdle in the U.S. Senate Thursday, but Democrats are likely to fall far short of their goal of passing legislation in the full Senate before Copenhagen.

Source: Reuters.com

Next article among the Most Popular

Posted By: Business Interactive Corp.
Email News Posting | Print News Posting | Post Comment
   
About Us   |   FAQ/Support   |   Partners   |   Disclaimer   |   Privacy   |   Contact Us

Tourism Exchange ©2006-2009 - Tools for small to medium sized businesses