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More than 60 leaders to attend Copenhagen

Danish police vows 'unprecedented' mobilisation at climate talks
Danish police said Tuesday they planned "unprecedented" mobilisation to guarantee the safety of the 30,000 participants expected at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen next month. Chief inspector Per Larsen did not specify the size of the police force to be deployed, saying the number would stay confidential. "This is undoubtedly the largest conference ever organised in Denmark, and it calls for unprecedented police mobilisation and material assistance from neighbouring countries," he told AFP Police forces from all of Denmark would ensure no "troublemakers" taint the event on December 7-18, he added. The Danish parliament has allotted a special budget of 620 million kroner (83.22 million euros, 124.41 million dollars) to the police for the climate conference. "We want this summit and its associated events to be a celebration and not the occasion to destroy our city, as claimed by some small extremist groups," Larsen said. Police will engage in a "dialogue with all non-governmental organisations (NGOs), those that are well organised and others," in order to come to "agreements" to ensure all demonstrations are peaceful and non-violent. Larsen also said that because it did not have the necessary resources, Danish police would borrow helicopters and police cars from neighbouring Sweden, as well as cars and police dogs from Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and "probably from Belgium." The Danish parliament is expected to adopt before December 7 a series of new measures such as higher fines and increased detention times to crack down on violent protestors. The talks in Copenhagen, under the 192-nation UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), aim to craft a post-2012 pact for curbing the heat-trapping gases that drive perilous global warming.
by Staff Writers
Copenhagen, Denmark (UPI) Nov 23, 2009
More than 60 heads of state and government will attend the crucial climate-change summit in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Leaders attending include French President Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Brazilian President Luiz Lula da Silva. Usually, only environment ministers attend the climate meetings, so expectations for the Dec. 8-17 conference have been boosted by this announcement made by the Danish government.

Delegations from some 190 countries are expected to flock to Copenhagen next month to hammer out a global climate-protection agreement.

Climate activists hope that the accord to be born at Copenhagen features binding emissions-reductions targets, adaptation measures and their funding. The treaty is aimed at replacing the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which runs out in 2012. Key to the new accord would be ambitious commitments from the United States and leading developing countries India and China.

But such are currently in jeopardy: For the past weeks, observers had lowered hopes that a binding agreement can be reached at Copenhagen. Leaders of India and China have also not yet confirmed their presence. U.S. President Barack Obama has said he might come.

Yet with so many leaders traveling to Copenhagen, pressure is due to rise on those still debating whether to attend.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is optimistic that the summit can be a success.

"I believe there is a strong and high degree of political resolve from many of the leaders around the world to land a Copenhagen agreement," he told the BBC.

Developing countries have said they would only commit to binding greenhouse gas emissions reductions if rich nations reduce their emissions by at least 40 percent until 2020 from 1990 levels. They have also asked for billions of dollars from developed nations for climate-change adaptation and mitigation purposes.

India and China have vowed not to move on the issue until the United States commits to ambitious climate-protection targets.

However, U.S. progress is delayed in the Senate. Republican senators have delayed the bill, which won't be passed before the Copenhagen meeting. Democrats hope that it will be passed in early 2010.

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Obama upbeat on climate, report shows worse crisis
Washington (AFP) Nov 24, 2009
US President Barack Obama sought Tuesday to boost hopes of a landmark deal at the Copenhagen climate summit, as a new report showed the crisis facing the planet is deeper than previously thought. Obama said the world was "one step closer to a successful outcome in Copenhagen," as he hosted key developing nation India at the White House a week after returning from top global polluter China. ... read more







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