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China's odd climate-change remark

UN panel defends climate change evidence
Geneva (AFP) Jan 26, 2010 - The UN climate panel has rejected as "baseless and misleading" a newspaper report that raised doubts about the evidence behind a claim that global warming is linked to worsening natural disasters. This weekend, the Sunday Times of London reported that a passage in one of the panel's reports, which suggested natural disasters including hurricanes and floods had increased in number and intensity, had been challenged. The IPCC insisted in a statement released late on Monday that the targeted study was quoted alongside others in balanced manner exposing the range of evidence. It said the panel had weighed its conclusions. "This section of the IPCC report is a balanced treatment of a complicated and important issue." "It clearly makes the point that one study detected an increase in economic losses, corrected for values at risk, but that other studies have not detected such a trend," the statement added. "The tone is balanced, and the section contains many important qualifiers."

The panel also underlined that it came to several conclusions about the role of climate change in extreme weather events and disasters in different sections of its reports, based on a "careful" assessment of past changes and projections of future trends. The panel concluded that the newspaper "ran a misleading and baseless story attacking the way the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC handled an important question concerning recent trends in economic losses from climate-related disasters." The Sunday Times had reported that the IPCC included the reference to the then unpublished study despite doubts raised by at least two scientific reviewers at the time. Professor Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, a climatologist at the Universite Catholique de Louvain in Belgium and the vice-chairman of the IPCC, was quoted by the newspaper as saying that the panel was reassessing the evidence. It was the second time in recent weeks that doubt was cast on the scientific validity some of the evidence used in the UN panel's reports. The IPCC last week admitted errors in a forecast about melting Himalayan glaciers that was included in a landmark 2007 report. The ongoing series of reports compiled since 1999 are meant to reflect a global scientific consensus to guide official action against climate change.
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (UPI) Jan 26, 2009
China's top climate-change negotiator said he was keeping an open mind on whether global warming was man-made or the result of natural cycles.

Speaking in New Delhi following the conclusion Sunday of a two-day meeting of ministers from the BASIC group of the most powerful emerging economies -- China, India, Brazil and South Africa -- Xie Zhenhua said climate change was a "solid fact." But, he said, more and better scientific research was needed to determine the causes.

India and South Africa's environment ministers seemed to be taken by surprise by Xie's comments made during a news briefing, the Telegraph reports. The Indian delegate to the BASIC meeting, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh, said he did not believe his Chinese counterpart had meant what he said, while South Africa's minister, Buyelwa Sonjica, said she could not "second guess" what Xie had meant by his comments.

Xie's remarks appeared to undermine the BASIC group's main argument, that Western developed countries should foot the bill for poor countries to switch to low-carbon models because their emissions are responsible for climate change.

The BASIC group played a key role in drawing up the Copenhagen Accord in December's climate-change talks.

In a joint statement following the New Delhi meeting, the BASIC group noted the accord represents a high-level political understanding among the participants on some of the disputed issues of climate-change negotiations.

The BASIC group said they would disclose the voluntary steps the countries would take to help reduce global warming by the Jan. 31 deadline set during the Copenhagen negotiations.

During the briefing, Ramesh said the value of the Copenhagen Accord lies not as a standalone document, "but as an input into the two-track negotiating process" under the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, which will culminate in Mexico City in December 2010.

The group called for Denmark, chair of the Conference of Parties to the United Nations, to hold at least five meetings of the working groups before the Mexico conference.

Rich nations should ensure the early distribution of $10 billion pledged for 2010 at Copenhagen to address climate change in the least developed nations and island states, noted the statement.

"That is the basic minimum," Ramesh said.

"If $10 billion as promised in the Copenhagen accord does not flow to Africa, to small island states and to the LDCs [least developed countries] we believe that frankly the developed countries are not serious," he said. "That is the first milestone that has to be achieved. You have to put money on the table, you have to identify the projects and money has to start flowing."



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UN climate panel head says glacier alarm 'regrettable error'
New Delhi (AFP) Jan 23, 2010
The head of the UN's climate science panel said Saturday a doomsday prediction about the fate of Himalayan glaciers was "a regrettable error" but that he would not resign over the blunder. Addressing a press conference in New Delhi, Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said the mistake arose from "established procedures not being ... read more







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