Conference,
Clashes Begin
As a Meeting on Global
Warming Opens, Leaders are Requested to ‘Work it Out’
A
masked anti-nuclear protester holds a sign minutes before being arrested
outside the conference hall where the sixth session of the U.N. Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) opens today in The Hague. (Bas Czerwinski/Reuters)
By Arthur Max
The Associated Press
T
H E H A G U E, Netherlands, Nov. 13—
A crucial U.N. conference opened today hoping to bridge sharp differences
on how to reduce greenhouse gases that threaten to bring cataclysmic changes
in the Earth’s climate.
Under the imperative
banner “Work it out,” some 10,000 government bureaucrats, scientists, environmentalists
and members of the business community from 150 countries began two weeks
of meetings, lobbying and tough negotiations over how to comply with an
international treaty to roll back emissions of heat-trapping gases to less
than what they were 10 years ago.
Flooding,
Elections in Background
Recent flooding on the European continent and Britain,
which some scientists attribute partially to global warming, highlighted
the consequences of changing weather patterns and added to the sense of
urgency in reaching an agreement.
Delegates also were closely
watching the political turmoil in the U.S. presidential election, noting
the opposing views of Democrat Al Gore, who has supported emissions reductions,
and Republican George W. Bush, who has voiced strong reservations about
U.S. promises to help control global warming.
Robert Watson, head of the U.N.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, set the challenge before the
delegates with a stark review of the earth’s climate, which he said had
been stable since the last Ice Age until well into the 20th century.
“The weight of scientific evidence
suggests that the observed changes in the Earth’s climate are, at least
in part, due to human activities,” he said, in a speech attended by Queen
Beatrix of the Netherlands.
In the next 100 years, he said,
deserts will become drier, crops will decrease in areas like Africa and
Latin America, forests will become more vulnerable to pests and disease,
coral reefs will die and rising seas will cause the displacement of tens
of millions of people.
Three years ago in Kyoto, Japan,
governments drew up targets and a rough outline for rolling back emissions
of carbon-based gases by a total of 5.2 percent from the 1990 level. Europe
agreed to cut emissions of these greenhouse gases by 8 percent, the United
States by 7 percent and Japan by 6 percent.
Differences
Over Pollution Trading
Sharp clashes were expected between the United States
and Europe over key issues of trading in “credits” that would reduce a
country’s obligation to meet its own targets by buying the surplus of another
country that produced fewer emissions than it is allotted.
The U.S. delegation, mindful
of future problems in ratifying a treaty by a cost-conscious Congress,
will argue for unfettered trading that it says will reduce costs while
meeting overall global targets. Europe wants to cap trading at 50 percent
of a country’s obligations.
The U.S. chief delegate, Undersecretary
of State Frank Loy, has called limiting credits “wrong-headed” and “anti-environment.”
Both sides are trying to line up allies for the backstage negotiations.
The U.S. position recently won the backing of 14 Latin American countries.
The United States also wants
an open-ended agreement allowing countries to offset their own emissions
against investments in pollution-reducing projects in other countries,
such as planting new forests that soak up carbon dioxide from the air.
In Bolivia, American and British
companies have paid a reported $10 million to buy out loggers and preserve
a forest that will be incorporated into an adjacent national park, hoping
to earn credit for the greenhouse gas absorbed by the trees.
Environmentalists:
Trading Is Cheating
Environmentalists call such mechanisms “loopholes” that
allow large polluting countries to evade their obligations and continue
polluting.
“Claiming credit for carbon
stored in trees is a blatant attempt by some countries to cheat on their
Kyoto commitments,” said Bill Hare, of Greenpeace.
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