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Bolivia's Morales slams capitalist debt to global warming

Climate treaty 'some way off': Australia
Washington (AFP) April 20, 2010 - A legally binding treaty on climate change remains "some way off," Australia's negotiator said Tuesday, as hopes ebb for a breakthrough before December's summit in Cancun, Mexico. Penny Wong, Australia's minister for climate change, was in Washington for talks among major economies on whether a treaty was possible in the wake of the turbulent last climate summit in Copenhagen in December. "I think we all know after Copenhagen that the objective of getting a legally binding agreement is some way off," Wong told reporters on Capitol Hill where she was meeting US lawmakers.

"I think there's no doubt that we've got a lot of work to do at Cancun and beyond," she said. Wong hoped that the Cancun conference could achieve tangible progress even if it does not complete a final treaty, saying that there was a "political consensus" from Copenhagen. "I hope Cancun can make constructive, positive steps on some key issues. There are certainly some key issues we need to operationalize," she said. Todd Stern, the top US climate negotiator, said Monday after the two-day talks that it was important to have "realistic" expectations for Cancun, playing down chances of a full-blown treaty.

The Kyoto Protocol requires wealthy nations to cut carbon emissions blamed for global warming through the end of 2012. Developed countries insist that the next treaty be legally binding and include emerging economies such as China. China, India and other major developing nations have pledged action on climate change but hesitated at a treaty with force of law, saying wealthy states bear historic responsibility for climate change. The shape of the next treaty is especially sensitive in the United States and Australia, where President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd both face challenges to persuade lawmakers to agree to action on climate change.
by Staff Writers
Cochabamba, Bolivia (AFP) April 20, 2010
Bolivian President Evo Morales opened a "people's conference" on climate change on Tuesday with an attack on capitalism's debt to global warming, before participants booed a UN envoy.

Environmental activists, indigenous leaders and Hollywood celebrities were scheduled to take part in the three-day summit focusing on the world's poorest, which they say were largely ignored at official United Nations-sponsored climate talks in Copenhagen last December.

"Either capitalism dies, or it will be Mother Earth," leftist Morales said to a crowd of some 20,000 people.

"We're here because industrialized countries have not honored their promises."

The Copenhagen meeting was widely criticized for failing to produce a new treaty to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Critics said the deal it produced will not avert a climate catastrophe.

The "People's World Conference on Climate Change and Mother Earth Rights" will draft new proposals for the next UN climate talks in Mexico at the end of the year.

But the UN representative in Bolivia struggled to make her voice heard over a chorus of booing on Tuesday.

"We came with all respect to hear the people, you invited us to be here. If you don't want us to be here we can leave," said Alicia Barcena, executive secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon sought dialogue, inclusion and transparency in the world climate debate, according to a message distributed by Barcena.

The colorful assembly, dotted with Andean flags and ponchos, met in a small stadium surrounded by mountains in Tiquipaya, in the suburbs of Cochabamba.

"We have a choice between two paths: one is a path of life, one is the path of destruction," said participant Faith Gemmill, an ethnic Gwich'in of the Alaska inter-tribal council.

Morales, of Aymara origin, said that the lifestyle of indigenous peoples, including their harmonious relationship with nature, should be "the only true alternative."

Morales sought to refine proposals he had presented in Copenhagen, including the creation of a world tribunal for climate issues and a global referendum on environmental choices.

Developing nations have resisted a legally binding climate treaty, arguing that wealthy nations must bear the primary responsibility for climate change.

This week's gathering was expected to give a megaphone to a left-leaning bloc of Latin American leaders, including presidents Rafael Correa of Ecuador, Fernando Lugo of Paraguay, Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela.

Nearly 130 countries, including many of the world's poorest, were to be represented in Cochabamba.

Anti-globalization activists Naomi Klein of Canada and Jose Bove of France were also on the guest list, while James Cameron, director of the blockbuster film "Avatar," and US actor Danny Glover were notable by their absence on Tuesday.

The conference followed a preparatory meeting between representatives from the world's leading economies in Washington ahead of the December UN summit in Cancun.

The US-led Major Economies Forum comprises 17 countries responsible for the bulk of global emissions and excludes smaller nations such as Sudan whose firebrand negotiators held up sessions at December's Copenhagen summit.



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CLIMATE SCIENCE
US cautious on prospects for climate deal
Washington (AFP) April 19, 2010
The United States said Monday it saw growing agreement among major countries on the shape of the next global package on climate change but downplayed expectations for a new treaty this year. The United States convened representatives of the world's major economies for two days of casual talks, hoping to gain an understanding of what would be possible at the next UN-led summit on climate chan ... read more







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