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media advisory
friends of the earth international
european ministers discuss climate
strategy - fears grow that europe is
abandoning climate talks leadership
Brussels , October 17, 2005 -- European Union
Environment Ministers are meeting on Monday
(17 October) to agree a European strategy for
the next United Nations climate negotiations,
which take place in Montreal , Canada next
month.
The meeting takes place amidst fears that
the international leadership previously
demonstrated by the EU on climate change may
now be watered down. There appears to be low
ambitions within the EU on future UN
negotiations on climate change, and
unwillingness to set themselves robust future
targets. Friends of the Earth says that such
an attitude would be disastrous: unless tough
action is urgently taken, the impacts will be
severe for the entire world.
Catherine Pearce, Friends of the Earth
International Climate Campaigner said:
“Warnings about the terrible impacts of
climate change are growing louder every day.
If we are to avoid a climatic disaster the
European Union must continue to push for
tough international action to tackle
emissions. Unless the world takes urgent
action to cut its emissions, the economic,
environmental and human costs will be
enormous."
for more information
contact
Catherine Pearce, Co-ordinator of the
Friends of the Earth International Climate
Programme
Phone: +44 20 7566 1723 / +44 7811
283641
Jan Kowalzig, Climate campaigner, Friends of
the Earth Europe
Phone: +32-473-510147 (mobile)
Esther Bollendorff, campaign assistant,
Friends of the Earth Europe
Phone: +32-021-161088 (mobile)
*
background
briefing *
*
meeting of the eu
environment council – monday 17 october,
luxembourg *
On 17 October, the 25 EU Environment
Ministers (plus Romania and Bulgaria) will
meet in Luxembourg, where they are due to
agree the EU position for the upcoming United
Nations climate negotiations (COP11 –
COP/MOP1), which will take place in Montreal
between 28 November and 8 December 2005.
But Friends of the Earth fears that the EU
will abandon its leadership role at the
international negotiations, despite growing
signs that climate change is proceeding apace
and people are feeling the impacts of more
intense extreme weather events such as
storms, floods, droughts or heat waves.
The meeting will be chaired by UK
environment minister Elliott Morley (the UK
holds the EU Presidency). The UK has made
climate change one of its priority areas for
international action. However, last month
Tony Blair raised concerns by appearing to
shift toward a more Bush-friendly view of
tackling global warming: against treaties and
targets for cutting emissions and toward
technological solutions [1]. He told a
conference in New York “to be honest, I don't
think people are going, at least in the short
term… to start negotiating another major
treaty like Kyoto"
UK Secretary of State for the Environment
Margaret Beckett said in a speech last week
[2] to a business audience that “we set
ourselves the objective of securing a final
deal by 2010”. But Friends of the Earth says
this is far too late. If we want an agreed a
framework which begins in 2012 (when the
current phase of the Kyoto treaty ends), a
“final deal” must be secured much
earlier.
*The 11th Conference of the Parties in
Montreal , Canada (28 November – 8 December
2005 )*
From 28 November to 8 December, governments
will meet in Montreal , Canada at the United
Nations climate negotiations. The meeting is
critical for future international action on
climate change, because negotiations will
begin on carbon dioxide reduction targets
when the first commitment period of Kyoto
ends in 2012. Ministers from around the world
are due to join the negotiations from 7-9
December.
Critical agenda items also include
compliance with and legal enforcement of the
Kyoto Protocol, the capacity and role of the
established funds for adaptation in
developing countries and a review of the
adequacy of existing targets, including
demonstrating progress by the 36 countries in
meeting their targets. EU countries must cut
their emissions by an average of eight per
cent by 2012 compared to 1990 levels.
*
What the EU must
do *
The EU must agree a pro-active and ambitious
agenda for the upcoming negotiations.
Economic fears over setting tougher concerns
are misguided. These concerns ignore the huge
financial impacts that climate change will
have on the world, as well as the economic
potential for climate change mitigation such
as triggering innovation as well as economic
gains in a world that will increasingly need
cleaner energy.
To strengthen leadership at the UN climate
negotiations, the EU Environment Ministers
must adopt the draft conclusions [3] for the
17 October meeting. These are:
-
Explicitly agree that the EU aims for
negotiations on a new commitment period for
the Kyoto Protocol, directly following the
first one, to be held under the Protocol
and to be completed by 2008 at the
latest.
-
Maintain and strengthen the reference
to both the mid-and long-term greenhouse
gas reduction needs, i.e. at least minus
30% by 2020 and minus 80% by 2050, compared
to 1990 levels. It should be made clear
that a new commitment phase will mean
absolute and mandatory emission cuts by
industrialised countries. Targets must be
based on accumulated, historic per capita
emissions as well as on economic capacity
to act.
-
Explicitly refer to the need that in
any future climate regime industrialised
countries must provide finance and
technology transfer, to enable poor
countries to choose climate-friendly
development.
-
Include a reference to the need to
reform the Clean Development Mechanism,
part of the Kyoto Protocol, so that it
really delivers sustainable
development.
-
Explicitly acknowledge the obligation
to compensate those affected by climate
change in developing countries. Appropriate
funding for adaptation and disaster relief
must become a binding commitment for the
industrialised nations under the climate
regime.
notes to editors
[1] 15 September 2005:
www.clintonglobalinitiative.org/home.nsf/pt_transcript1
www.foe.co.uk/resource/press_releases/Blair%20u-urn%20on%20climate%20change
[2] Keynote speech at “Climate Change: the
Business Forecast” 5 October 2005
www.defra.gov.uk/corporate/ministers/speeches/mb051005.htm
[3] Draft conclusions from 11 October
available at:
www.foe.co.uk/resource/media_briefing/council_of_the_european_un.pdf
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