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UN chief warns world failing on climate

Nauru leaders fears death by jargon
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Dec 7, 2010 - As small island nations fret over rising sea levels linked to climate change, one of their leaders voiced fear Tuesday at being submerged by another force -- negotiators' jargon. Marcus Stephen, president of Nauru and leader of the group of Pacific Small Island Developing States at international climate negotiations, voiced regret that many nations did not see the same urgency to global warming. "The Pacific has a rich cultural and linguistic tradition. Hundreds of distinct languages are spoken in homes throughout our 14 countries," he told the talks in Cancun, Mexico. "However, none of our words are quite so exotic as the ones spoken by the climate change negotiator. The people who inhabit these walls communicate in acronyms: QELROS, LULUCF, and NAMAs: letters that carry the power to determine which of our nations may thrive and which may vanish beneath the waves."

"The gravity of the crisis has escaped us. It has become lost in a fog of scientific, economic and technical jargon," he said. "Without bold action, it will be left to our children to come up with the words to convey the tragedy of losing our homelands when it did not have to be this way," he warned. In the jargon of the UN -- or the UNFCCC (UN Convention on Climate Change), to be exact -- QELROS stands for Quantified Emissions Limitation and Reduction Objectives. LULUCF is "land use, land use-change and forestry," a way to set off carbon emissions, and NAMAs are "nationally appropriate mitigation actions." Such jargon is regularly parlance at UNFCCC negotiations, which aim to come up with a plan to act against climate change once the Kyoto Protocol's commitments run out at the end of 2012. Most scientists warn that climate change is melting the Arctic cap and glaciers and therefore triggering a rise in water levels, putting some island nations at risk of survival.
by Staff Writers
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Dec 7, 2010
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned Tuesday that the world was missing its last chance to control climate change, appealing to nations at talks in Mexico to ramp up progress.

In an emphatic address to the 194-nation talks, the UN chief highlighted studies by scientists who say the world has a limited gateway to cut carbon emissions or risk irreversible damage to the planet.

"I'm deeply concerned that our efforts so far have been insufficient, that despite the evidence and many years of negotiation we are still not rising to the challenge," Ban said as the two-week talks entered the final four days.

"Business as usual cannot be tolerated," he said. "Cancun must represent a breakthrough."

"The world, particularly the poor and vulnerable, cannot afford the luxury of waiting for the perfect agreement," Ban said, adding: "Every country can and must do more."

Host Mexico has encouraged nations to look for building blocks to an eventual climate accord, hoping to undo some of the damage from last year's Copenhagen summit, which disappointed many environmentalists.

To the surprise of some of the hardened negotiators, the talks have appeared to bear fruit with a compromise eyed on one of the key stumbling blocks -- verification of nations' promises to fight climate change.

China climbed down from its past refusal on verification after India drafted a compromise under which all countries responsible for more than one percent of emissions would submit to verification but not face "punitive consequences."

"It does represent progress," US lead negotiator Todd Stern said.

The draft is "definitely not adequate yet, but it's a step in the right direction. If we can keep moving a few more steps, we might actually get there," Stern said.

But Stern warned that another dispute remained "very tough" -- on the future of the Kyoto Protocol.

With few expecting a new full-fledged treaty anytime soon, the European Union has led calls to extend the Kyoto Protocol past the end of 2012, when requirements under the landmark 1997 agreement are set to expire.

The EU position has triggered protests from Japan. It says Kyoto is unfair by not involving the two top polluters -- China, which has no requirements as a developing country, and the United States, which rejected the treaty in 2001.

"It is absolutely imperative that we deliver something, something substantial," EU Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard said. "To come out of Cancun with nothing is simply not an option."

Even if countries carry out pledges they have already made, they are off track to meet the goal agreed in Copenhagen to check rising temperatures at two degrees Celsius compared with pre-industrial levels.

"There is a giant gap. We need to acknowledge and commit to close that," said Alden Meyer of the Union of Concerned Scientists, an environmental group.

The US Congress looks unlikely to approve any restrictions on carbon emissions after the Republican Party's victory. President Barack Obama's administration, however, has pledged to meet its Copenhagen target of cutting emissions by 17 percent by 2020 from 2005 levels.

The Cancun conference is also making progress on how rich nations can help in reducing emissions from deforestation in developing nations -- known to negotiators as REDD.

The loss of trees accounts each year for 12 to 25 percent of the carbon emissions due to the loss of vegetation that counteracts the gas.

Activists and negotiators from several Latin American nations have pressed against a deal out of suspicion over calls to set up a market, in which nations would offer forest aid in return for credit to meet their climate goals.

Thousands of activists and Mexican peasants, holding rainbow flags and playing drums and flutes, marched in central Cancun, many of them to reject the REDD deal.

"REDD is a false solution because you are creating a market on our forests, you are not protecting our Mother Earth," said US activist Kari Fulton.

"We are standing here to say that we want protection and to be respected," she said.



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