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Gore backs Australia on climate change

Brazil sees possible UN climate deal in December
A possible deal on battling global climate change could be reached at a UN summit to be held in Denmark in December, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Monday. "I think we'll reach an agreement at the Copenhagen meeting in December," he said in his weekly radio program. He said there had been progress towards that goal, with "rich countries now ready to discuss things they wouldn't discuss before," notably with the United States under President Barack Obama "assuming responsibility" on the subject. Nevertheless, Lula admitted that differences persisted between the G8 group of industrialized nations (Britain, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States) and the G5 group of top emerging economies (Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South Africa). "The G5's position is different to that of the G8," he said. He explained that "a country that started its industrialization process 150 years ago has more responsibility than one starting yesterday; the United States has more responsibility than China, and Europe more than South America or Africa."
by Staff Writers
Melbourne (AFP) July 13, 2009
High-profile climate change campaigner Al Gore on Monday backed Australia's environmental policies and said this year's devastating bushfires were a savage reminder of the need to act.

The former US presidential candidate, in Melbourne to launch the Safe Climate Australia think-tank, said Prime Minister Kevin Rudd had shown the environment was a top priority.

"In my country we have a new president and in only 30 days after taking office (he) was able to pass in the US Congress 80 billion dollars for renewable energy and for green infrastructure," Gore said.

"Your new leadership 18 months on here in Australia has done something similar."

Gore had earlier praised Rudd for pushing ahead with emissions trading legislation before a UN climate change conference takes place in Copenhagen in December.

Rudd also won plaudits from environmentalists by signing Australia up to the Kyoto Protocol on global warming as one of his first acts as prime minister.

Gore said Australia's worst ever bushfires, which were fanned by record temperatures and left 173 people dead, offered evidence that the planet had a "fever."

"It's difficult to ignore the fact that cyclones are getting stronger, that the fires are getting bigger, that the sea level is rising, that the refugees are beginning to move from places they have long called home," Gore said.

"The odds have been shifted so heavily that fires that used to be manageable now threaten to spin out of control and wreak damages that are far beyond what was experienced in the past."

earlier related report
Gore forms Safe Climate Australia group
Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore on Sunday launched Safe Climate Australia, a think tank aimed at limiting Australia's dependence on coal and helping it to become a zero-carbon economy while also addressing warming global temperatures.

Australia ranks eighth in the world for its coal consumption.

The organization is composed of scientists and corporate and civic leaders.

Safe Climate Australia foundation board member Ian Dunlop, former chairman of the Australian Coal Association, said the new organization's initiatives would draw on the most promising policies worldwide to cut emissions and find ways to suck greenhouse gas from the atmosphere, The Age reported.

Australia has committed to a 60 percent reduction in emissions by 2050, with interim 2020 targets of between 5 percent and 25 percent. Some Australian environmental groups are critical of the government, saying those targets are too weak.

When asked by reporters following the launch if the government's emission-reduction targets went far enough, Gore said he likened it to U.S. targets.

"It's not what I would have written. I would have written it as a stronger bill, but I'm realistic about what can be accomplished within the political system as it is," Gore told the New Zealand Herald.

"I am sincerely convinced that the right way forward is to get to the maximum that the political system will allow us to accomplish and begin the change, and then, as we gain experience with it, toughen it, strengthen it, make it better based on experience as business and industry learn how to adjust."

Gore said the G8 agreement last Wednesday that developed nations should cut emissions by 80 percent by 2050 was a positive step.

According to the Safe Climate Australia Web site, the organization "will model the economic, social and environmental costs and benefits of the most promising strategies for transitioning the Australian economy to zero carbon and for implementing large-scale sequestration of existing atmospheric carbon."

For its part, Australia's total energy use has increased by 15 percent over the last six years, according to a recent report by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Manufacturing and the electricity, gas and water industries were the largest domestic energy users, while households accounted for 12 percent of the country's energy usage.

As part of one of its first initiatives, Safe Climate Australia plans to train 300 people from 19 countries, including India and Indonesia, on encouraging leaders to address climate change.

Origin Energy General Manager Peter Israel, who attended the launch, told the Australian daily that although climate change was an issue largely met with resistance in his industry, he believes that the energy sector could have a green and profitable future.

Gore's initiative comes ahead of international climate-change talks in Denmark later this year in which governments will seek to agree on a successor to the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, which expires in 2012.

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