Big developing states reject Copenhagen climate plan

China, the world’s top emitter, together with India, Brazil  and South Africa demand that richer nations do more and have  drawn “red lines” limiting what they themselves would accept,  the diplomats told Reuters. Their tough stance could moderate,  however, if developing countries pledge steeper carbon  pollution reductions of their own.

The four rejected key targets proposed by the Danish  climate talks hosts in a draft text — halving global  greenhouse gases by 2050, setting a 2020 deadline for a peak in  world emissions and limiting global warming to a maximum 2  degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times, European diplomats  said.

But Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations  Framework Convention on Climate Change, told reporters he  thought “there is a broad acceptance amongst those countries”  on the 2 degrees Celsius, referring to China, India, Brazil and  South Africa. De Boer spoke from Bonn and was participating in  a teleconference previewing the two-week Copenhagen summit that  begins  on Monday.

Developing nations want richer countries to do much more to  cut their emissions now before they agree to global emissions  targets which they fear may shift the burden of action to them,  and crimp their economic growth.

“We cannot agree to the 50/50 (halving emissions by 2050)  because it implies that … the remaining (cuts) must be done  by developing countries,” South Africa’s chief climate  negotiator Alf Wills said, partly confirming the EU diplomats’  comments.

Rich nations’ carbon offers so far were far below those  recommended by a U.N. panel of scientists, Wills told Reuters,  making clear that developing nations could change their stance  if industrialized states tightened their carbon targets.

“In India…there are 400 million people that don’t have  access to electricity. Asking a country like that to reduce its  emissions in absolute terms means that 400 million people  without electricity is not enough and…maybe they should be  thinking about 800 million. That doesn’t make any sense,” de  Boer said.

The dispute underscored a rich-poor rift which has haunted  the two-year talks to agree a new global climate deal to  succeed the Kyoto Protocol in 2013 and dampens hopes of  rescuing the Dec. 7-18 Copenhagen summit.

A legally binding deal is already out of reach for the U.N.  talks, with only a political deal possible.