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India pledges to cut carbon intensity ahead of Copenhagen

Brazil, Germany expect step forward at Copenhagen talks
Berlin (AFP) Dec 3, 2009 - German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Thursday they did not expect a "dream" accord at the Copenhagen climate summit but foresaw a major step forward. "I do not believe we will achieve the accord we have all been dreaming of," Lula told reporters after talks with Merkel in Berlin. "Each president must take into account his domestic political constraints," he said, adding that he was "more optimistic than most" and expected "major progress" at the December 7-18 UN-sponsored conference. Merkel, who like Lula plans to attend the Copenhagen meeting, agreed that some headway could be made on international efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions and slow climate change. "Copenhagen will not be ideal -- the writing is already on the wall -- but at least it will be a significant step foward," she said. Speaking for industrialised countries, Merkel said they were aware of their responsibility for the bulk of CO2 emissions but said no action plan could hope for success that did not bring emerging economic powers on board.

"We must convince China, we must convince India," Lula agreed. The two leaders signed several bilateral accords including an agreement for Germany to help Brazil prepare to host both football's 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games based on its own experience hosting the 2006 World Cup. Lula and Merkel openly disagreed, however, on how to curb Iran's nuclear ambitions. "Our patience is running out," Merkel said, adding that "no progress" had been made despite years of discussion with Tehran on abandoning sensitive nuclear work, which the West believes is aimed at producing an atomic arsenal. Iran denies the accusation. "The more sensible thing for everyone would be to engage in negotiations and show a lot of patience," said Lula, who is an advocate of dialogue with the Islamic republic and last month hosted Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for a brief controversial visit. "Those with (nuclear arms) must destroy their arsenals, that would be the better argument," in negotiations with Iran, he said in a reference to the United States and Russia.
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Dec 3, 2009
India pledged on Thursday to cut its carbon footprint in the next decade by reducing the intensity of its emissions, in a long-awaited move ahead of the Copenhagen climate talks.

Addressing parliament, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said India needed to show leadership to its people and the world and even invoked the country's environment-minded independence leader Mahatma Gandhi to bolster his arguments.

Reiterating the country's rejection of binding emissions targets or a peak year by which its emissions would have to fall, he committed instead to reducing the carbon intensity of the national economy.

"We will on our own cut emissions intensity by 20 to 25 percent if we get support from the international community," the minister told lawmakers.

Ramesh will head to Copenhagen next week and stay for the bulk of negotiations, his office said.

He explained that the cut in carbon intensity meant the creation of each unit of gross domestic product would produce 20-25 percent less greenhouse gas emissions compared to a 2005 baseline.

The target will be voluntary and non-binding, but the statement marks a major shift for India, which had refused to quantify its commitment to cutting carbon dioxide emissions.

"At Copenhagen, if we have a successful agreement, if we have an equitable agreement, if we are satisfied with this agreement, we are prepared to do even more," he told lawmakers.

Saleemul Huq, senior fellow at the London-based International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), called the announcement a "welcome sign that the Indians are prepared to take action".

"Larger developing countries are now coming forward with domestic actions but they should also be prepared to take further actions and those costs need to be reimbursed," Huq told AFP from London.

India was seen as under pressure to make a gesture after the world's top two polluters, China and the United States, put numbers on the table last month.

India's carbon intensity is lower than China's, the biggest emitter, which last month declared it would cut the intensity of carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP in 2020 by 40 to 45 percent from 2005 levels.

A reduction in carbon intensity means India's and China's carbon emissions would continue to rise in the long term but at a slower pace, leading critics to label such plans "smokescreens".

Huq disagreed, saying: "Cutting carbon intensity is a good first step. Ultimately what matters is total emissions and all countries have to plan for a post fossil-fuel economy."

The United States, the world's second biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, will also head to Copenhagen with an offer to cut US emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020 and larger amounts in the future.

The December 7-18 talks in the Danish capital are aimed at forging a new pact to tackle greenhouse gas emissions and their impact after the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012.

Ramesh said India's carbon intensity had declined by 17.6 percent between 1990 and 2005, and further cuts could be achieved through a host of measures, including stricter vehicle emissions targets, improved building standards and "clean coal" technology in power stations.

Coal is the source for a majority of India's electricity generation.

"India... owes a responsiblity not to the world, but to itself to take climate change seriously," Ramesh said, adding that the country had particular reason to be worried about global warming.

"Climate change is of great significance to our country and ever since I became minister on May 29 I have been trying to spread this single message that the most vulnerable country in the world to climate change is India," he said.

One of the reasons, he explained, is India's reliance on an annual monsoon for water, which was the weakest in nearly four decades this year.

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Failure in Copenhagen would be 'catastrophic risk': Gorbachev
Paris (AFP) Dec 3, 2009
The Copenhagen climate summit is a "test of modern leadership" and a failed outcome would almost certainly condemn the planet to disaster, Mikhail Gorbachev said Thursday in an interview. The Nobel laureate and last leader of the Soviet Union also told AFP that Russia had put forward serious targets for curbing carbon emissions and should not be cast as a spoiler going into the December 7-18 ... read more







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