India opens door to climate deal, EU stuck

NEW DELHI/BRUSSELS, (Reuters) – India softened  climate demands on Friday, helping bridge a rich-poor divide,  but said a global deal may miss a December deadline by a few  months.

In contrast, European Union states struggled to agree a  common stance for financing a U.N. climate pact, meant to be  agreed in Copenhagen at a Dec. 7-18 meeting.
India wanted generous aid on advanced carbon-cutting  technologies but dropped a core demand that industrialised  countries cut greenhouse gases by 40 percent by 2020.
“If we say, let’s start with 25 percent, that’s a beginning.  I’m not theological about this. It’s a negotiation. We have  given a number of 40 but one has to be realistic,” environment  minister Jairam Ramesh said in a Reuters interview.

Ramesh said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, keen to overturn  India’s image as obstructionist in multi-lateral negotiations,  had mandated him to be flexible.

“I tell you my prime minister has told me two days ago,  ‘don’t block, be constructive…make sure there’s an agreement.’  What more can I say?”

Indian is now in line with the European Union, which has  promised to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20-30 percent by  2020 below 1990 levels. U.S. President Barack Obama wants to  return U.S. emissions to 1990 levels by then.

India also now supported a British estimate that the  developed world should pay about $100 billion annually by 2020  to help poorer nations cope with and slow climate change.
Until now it has suggested that the developed world pay 1  percent of their national wealth — a far higher figure which  some rich countries branded a fantasy.

But Europe struggled to find a common position on climate  finance yesterday, as member states guard national treasuries  with a robust economic recovery still not in sight.

The EU was silent about stepping up climate aid to  developing nations, after talk last month from its executive  Commission of paying up to 15 billion euros ($22.4 billion) a  year by 2020 to break the impasse between rich and poor.

China and India say they cannot cut emissions and adapt to  changing temperatures without help from industrialised nations,  which grew rich by burning fossil fuels, emitting carbon.

A draft EU report for finance ministers called the past  figures “a useful estimate for overall public and private  efforts” but pointed to the “uncertainty…of such numbers”.
And cracks emerged over EU plans for cuts in emissions.

The 27-country bloc has pledged to cut its own emissions to  20 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and to increase cuts to 30  percent if other rich regions take similar action.

But Romania and Slovakia have proposed making the increase  to 30 percent less of a foregone conclusion, documents obtained  by Reuters show.

Romania also questions proposals to cut  emissions by up to 95 percent by 2050.