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  • India, China agree to cooperate on climate change

    LOL

    The enemy of my enemy is .......Al Gore.

    The Associated Press: India, China agree to cooperate on climate change


    India, China agree to cooperate on climate change

    By MUNEEZA NAQVI (AP) – 13 hours ago

    NEW DELHI — India and China, both major polluters and crucial players in fighting global warming, agreed Wednesday to stand together on climate change issues at a major global conference later this year.

    The December summit in Copenhagen aims to replace the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, the first international deal requiring reductions in emissions of heat-trapping "greenhouse gases" by industrialized countries.

    Developing countries argue that the industrial world produced most of the harmful gases in recent decades and should bear the costs of fixing the problem. India and China have agreed to work on slowing the growth of greenhouse gas emissions, but resist making those limits binding and subject to international monitoring.

    "There is no difference between the Indian and Chinese negotiating positions, and we are discussing further what the two countries should be doing for a successful outcome at Copenhagen," Indian Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said, according to the Press Trust of India news agency.

    Xie Zhenhua, China's top climate change negotiator, said the agreement "will usher in a new scenario and take cooperation on climate change between the two countries to a new high," PTI reported.

    The agreement emphasized that the "United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and its Kyoto Protocol are the most appropriate framework for addressing climate change," according to a text released by India's Environment Ministry.

    The United States rejected the Kyoto Protocol because it exempted developing countries, such as India and China, from obligations. Developing countries also want financial aid for their climate change efforts. The challenge in Copenhagen is finding a way to make a deal.

    On Tuesday, India, Pakistan and six other South Asian nations said they will stand together at Copenhagen to stick with the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

    Wednesday's agreement between India and China comes as a diplomatic dispute continues over the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which China claims as its territory since the two nations fought a war in 1962. India rejects Beijing's claim.

    The countries have sparred over a proposed visit to the region by the Dalai Lama in mid-November, with China opposing the trip and India's Foreign Ministry saying the Tibetan spiritual leader is free to travel within India.

    Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
    “the misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not being exploited at all” -- Joan Robinson

  • #2
    China, India Forge Alternative to UN Climate-Protection Treaty
    Share | Email | Print | A A A

    By Gaurav Singh

    Oct. 22 (Bloomberg) -- China and India’s joint plan to cut greenhouse-gas emissions provides the developing world with an alternative to the global climate treaty that wealthier nations want them to sign in Copenhagen this year, analysts said.

    Asia’s two biggest polluters from burning carbon-based fuels said they will collaborate on renewable power and energy- efficiency projects, in a memorandum of understanding yesterday in New Delhi. They rejected limits on their emissions proposed by industrialized nations under an international climate accord.

    “They’re trying to gain leverage going into Copenhagen and show the world they have other options if the global talks break down,” said Olav Roenningen, senior analyst at carbon-markets advisory firm Markedskraft in Arendal, Norway.

    The New Delhi accord shows how support may be eroding for a treaty that United Nations negotiators aim to conclude in Copenhagen in December. Developing nations led by China and India are devising similar regional agreements, citing a failure by wealthier countries including the U.S. to agree to reduce emissions by 40 percent from 1990 levels by 2020 and share clean-energy technology with poorer countries.

    Speculation that countries won’t produce a treaty has built this month after Yvo De Boer, the top UN climate official, said on Oct. 13 that the Copenhagen summit may be “half-baked” unless rich nations agree to do more to trim gas emissions.

    “When India and China take the lead, the rest usually follow,” said Michael Mason, director of the conservation program at Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics. Still, their new accord may be seen “as a ploy to say we’re going to go ahead and start dealing bilaterally if we can’t come to a multilateral agreement.”

    More Regional Deals

    The accord was signed by Xie Zhenhua, vice minister at China’s National Development and Reform Commission, and Indian environment minister Jairam Ramesh in the Indian capital.

    “We may see even more regional deals like this during the next month before the UN climate talks start,” Roenningen said.

    India and neighboring countries may sign a regional environment treaty next year, Ramesh said in a separate speech at a meeting of officials from the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, known as Saarc.

    “A regional environment treaty will be finalized, to be signed at the next Saarc summit at Thimpu in April 2010,” Ramesh said on Oct. 20. Thimpu is the capital of Bhutan.

    Saarc includes India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Maldives and Bhutan. China is not a member.

    Ministers from more than 30 African nations agreed in May that measures to adapt to the effects of climate change on agriculture, water supply, forests and human health should be included in national and regional development plans.

    Chinese Pledge

    Chinese President Hu Jintao said last month his country will cut emissions in proportion to economic growth, without outlining specific goals or whether he would included it in a global agreement.

    China and India together account for about one-fourth of the emissions blamed for global warming that scientists say leads to rising sea levels, as well as disruptive weather patterns that cause more intense storms and droughts.

    The United Nations is aiming for a climate agreement to replace or extend the Kyoto Protocol, expiring in 2012. After climate talks in Bangkok this month, countries have another week in Barcelona in November before the Copenhagen summit.

    “India and China are most vulnerable to climate change,” Xie said yesterday. “Both countries are in the process of rapid industrialization and urbanization. I am confident China and India will make a positive contribution to Copenhagen.”

    Examining India

    The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and its Kyoto Protocol provisions are the most appropriate framework for addressing climate change, according to the copy of the agreement given to reporters in New Delhi.

    India will consider outside measurement and verification of its efforts to tackle climate change if they were supported by international finance and the transfer of technology from developed nations, Ramesh said in a statement on Oct. 20.

    “There is virtually no difference in Indian and Chinese negotiating positions,” Ramesh said.

    Ramesh suggested earlier this month that only a limited agreement would emerge in Copenhagen and that the conference should focus on rich countries financing and aiding poor nations affected by climate change.

    Trust between rich and developing nations had “broken down” at recent UN negotiations in Bangkok, he said.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Gaurav Singh in New Delhi at [email protected]
    Last Updated: October 21, 2009 14:00 EDT
    China, India Forge Alternative to UN Climate-Protection Treaty - Bloomberg.com
    “the misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not being exploited at all” -- Joan Robinson

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    • #3
      Originally posted by xinhui View Post
      LOL The enemy of my enemy is .......Al Gore.
      18% (China) + 6% (India) ~= 25% >> Injun' suckers:
      Originally posted by xinhui View Post
      China and India together account for about one-fourth of the emissions blamed for global warming that scientists say leads to rising sea levels, as well as disruptive weather patterns that cause more intense storms and droughts.

      Comment

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