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CLIMATE SCIENCE
World leaders back drive for Paris climate deal
By Alex PIGMAN
Antalya, Turkey (AFP) Nov 16, 2015


Security fears risk overshadowing Paris climate summit
Paris (AFP) Nov 16, 2015 - Security fears in the wake of Friday's brutal slaying of 129 people in Paris threaten to overshadow a crunch climate summit to be launched by 120 world leaders in the French capital on November 30.

France's government has said it will not "give in" to terrorism and insists that the long-anticipated conference will go ahead, tasked with no less than producing a plan to rescue Earth's climate.

But Prime Minister Manuel Valls said on Monday that "without a doubt" concerts and other gatherings of a "festive" nature would be cancelled.

The UN climate conference, for which about 40,000 delegates, journalists, observers, NGOs and other participants are accredited, will be "limited to negotiation", said Valls -- excluding certain planned side-events.

US President Barack Obama has said he still intends to attend the summit, and Valls said none of the 120-odd heads of state or government who accepted invitations to the opening had asked for a postponement.

"All want to be there. To do otherwise would, I believe, be to yield to terrorism," said Valls, who on Sunday called the gathering "an essential meeting for humanity."

But the violent events of the weekend, claimed by Islamic State jihadists, have thrown into doubt a mass rally in central Paris planned for November 29, on the summit's eve, and another on December 12, the day after the meeting is scheduled to close.

Coalition Climate 21, the civil society grouping organising the marches, was to meet in Paris on Monday to decide how to proceed.

"We are horrified by the attacks, and our heart goes out to everyone in Paris and across the world who is mourning today," it said in a statement.

Valls said the safety of demonstrators was paramount, and security forces would have to "concentrate on the essential" -- the conference itself.

This threatened a series of exhibitions, concerts and other gatherings organised around the city to beat the drum for urgent climate action.

In the midst of a national state of emergency and massive anti-terror deployment, it might be hard to free up the 5,000-odd police and military police required to secure the November 29 rally, a security source told AFP.

The march is meant to start at Place de la Republique square, very close to the scene of Friday's restaurant and bar shootings.

- Security 'reinforced' -

Before the coordinated wave of attacks carried out by three groups of gunmen and suicide bombers on Friday night, it had been announced that 1,500 police, military police and firefighters, more than 100 UN guards and 300 private security agents would secure Le Bourget, the airport outside Paris that will host the conference.

On Sunday, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said security would be further "reinforced".

Dubbed COP21 -- for the 21st Conference of Parties to the UN's climate convention -- the gathering aims to deliver the first truly global agreement on reining in greenhouse gas emissions blamed for dangerous levels of climate change.

"Of course COP21 proceeds as planned. Even more so now," tweeted UN climate chief Christiana Figueres.

The conference is meant to crown six years of tough negotiations after talks broke down during the previous attempt at clinching a global deal, in Copenhagen in 2009.

"We are at a crucial point in the fight against climate change: we are three weeks from an agreement," said Matthieu Orphelin, a spokesman for French environment NGO Fondation Nicolas Hulot, which closely follows the talks.

"The COP and Le Bourget will be highly secured. Now we have to think about everything on the fringes."

Even before the attacks claimed by Islamic State jihadists, France had reintroduced border checks as it tightened security ahead of the summit.

Leaders of the world's top economies on Monday backed a drive to curb catastrophic climate change at an upcoming UN conference in Paris, according to a statement drawn up in tough, all-night talks.

Negotiators at a Group of 20 summit in Turkey haggled into the early hours as Saudi Arabia and India initially refused to include specific goals such as limiting global warming to less than two degrees Celsius (3.6 Farenheit) above pre-industrialised levels, sources said.

France, backed by the European Union, is working furiously to make the climate talks a success and Paris officials bristled at the reluctance of some countries to include its basic objectives in the statement.

"Climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time," said the communique marking the end of the summit in the Turkish resort of Antalya.

"We reaffirm the below 2C degree climate goal," it said, underlining a "determination" to adopt a deal with legal force.

The blockbuster climate meeting will assemble 195 countries outside Paris from November 30 to December 11 in a bid to reach a post-2020 pact to try to stem global warming.

The 2C goal has guided the long-running talks -- held under the auspices of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change -- since 2009.

- 'Elephant in the room' -

France is eager to avoid the fate of the Copenhagen talks in 2009 that also sought to craft a world climate rescue pact, but ended in near-fiasco amid splits between rich and emerging countries.

"At a certain point there was a feeling that we were not living on the same planet," an exhausted European negotiator told reporters after more than 20 hours of talks with his G20 counterparts.

"The idea was to just state that the G20 countries will be committed to a regular process, to get to the numbers of the target, with regular steps, that was the idea. This is common sense," he said.

Activists said the statement still offered nothing new and criticised a worrying lack of leadership just two weeks ahead of the Paris talks.

"They have done nothing to bring the 20 most powerful countries in the world closer to consensus," said John Kirton, co-director of the G20 Research Group at the University of Toronto.

Observers denounced the failure of the G20 leaders to offer details on financing for developing countries to make the transition to clean energy.

Developing nations are looking to rich countries to show how they intend to meet a promise made in 2009 to mobilise $100 billion (92 billion euros) per year in climate finance from 2020.

The funds will help poorer economies make the shift from cheap and abundant fossil fuels to renewable energy sources, and shore up national defences against climate change-induced superstorms, drought, floods and sea-level rise.

France insists this will be key to getting an agreement in December.

It is "difficult" to see success in Paris "without climate finance on the table," said Tristram Sainsbury, analyst at Lowy Institute in Sydney. "That is the big elephant in the room for the G20," he said.


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