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5 november 2001
eu ministers should stand firm
Tomorrow (Tuesday) European environment
ministers meet at the climate talks in
Marrakech for urgent discussions - as the
strength of the Bonn accord risks being
seriously undermined by the current
negotiations.
Ministers are due to meet formally on
Wednesday for "high level" negotiations on
progress with the Bonn accord. But proposals
from the Japanese, Australian, Canadan and
Russian delegations threaten to weaken the
agreement that governments signed up to in
Bonn. The Bonn agreement stated there would
be legally binding consequences for
non-compliance with the targets for cutting
greenhouse gas emissions. (Under the
Protocol, adopting legally-binding
consequences requires an amendment to the
treaty, once it has entered into force). The
Bonn deal set out what this amendment would
include. But now Japan, Australia, Canada and
Russia say the nature of the compliance
regime should not be pre-judged. The Canadian
Environment Minister David Anderson stated
this weekend that the treaty does not need
legally binding consequences - clearly
undermining the desire for a robust
enforcement regime, demonstrated in Bonn.
Despite Japanese objections on compliance,
it was reported this weekend that the
Japanese Government may soon announce its
intention to go ahead and ratify the Kyoto
Protocol, providing clear evidence that this
is not a ratification issue [1].
Russia is objecting to calls for
transparency under the compliance system,
again putting pressure on delegations,
including the EU, to weaken the requirements.
Russia says it is a ratification issue -
although Putin said Russia would ratify the
Protocol following the Bonn accord. Russia
must ratify for the Protocol to come into
force. EU Ministers, bound by the Aarhus
Convention [2], which entered into force last
week, should be pushing for greater
transparency on environmental issues.
There have also been calls to allow
countries to bank unused "sinks" credits from
the first commitment period for later use.
Encouraging the use of sinks (land use and
forestry projects) - included in the Bonn
deal for political reasons - could cause
environmental and social problems [3].
Carrying forward sink credits will create
problems for countries joining at a later
stage. The US is likely to demand a level
playing field if they join at the next
commitment stage.
Friends of the Earth International Climate
Campaigner Kate Hampton said:
"EU ministers must be clear that the text on
the table now is not what they intended in
Bonn. The agreement has been watered down
enough already. Without a strong enforcement
system, the Kyoto Protocol will not be worth
the paper it is written on."
Friends of the Earth International experts
will be in Marrakech throughout COP7.
Contact:
Kate Hampton (FOEI International Climate
Coordinator in Marrakech 26th October -11th
November) +44 774 896 7323
Helen Burley (press officer) + 44 7778
356888
Notes
[1] Yomiuri Shimbun (4/11/01)
[2] The Aarhus Convention no Access to
Information, Public Participation in
Decision-making and Access to Justice in
Environmental Matters, ratified by the EU and
17 non-EU countries, 30 October 2001.
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