Solving Kyoto row said key to unlock Cancun deal

CANCUN, Mexico, (Reuters) – Resolving a dispute between  rich and poor nations over cuts in greenhouse gas emissions is  key to unblocking progress on all issues at U.N. climate talks in  Mexico, a senior official said yesterday.

New draft texts at the Nov. 29 to Dec. 10 talks gave widely  varying ways out of the deadlock pitting Japan, Canada and  Russia against developing nations who accuse them of breaking  promises of future cuts under the U.N.’s Kyoto Protocol.

The issue of reining in emissions is “the big question that  has to be answered in some way, shape or form,” John Ashe, chair  of the section of the U.N. talks on the future of the Kyoto  Protocol, told Reuters.
The issues are “not independent of each other,” he said,  adding that a deal on curbs could unlock a wider modest package.

The Cancun talks are also seeking a deal on a new fund to help  poor nations, ways to protect tropical forests and share clean  technologies. The effort comes amid predictions that global  warming will bring devastating droughts, heatwaves, floods, more  powerful storms and rising sea levels.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon arrived in the Caribbean  beach resort to address an opening session for ministers from  around the world yesterday. The talks are the first since the  U.N. summit in Copenhagen fell short of a treaty last year.Japan, Russia and Canada have been adamant in Cancun that  they will not approve an extension to Kyoto when a first period  runs out in 2012 and want a new, broader treaty that will also  bind emerging economies led by China and India to act.

But developing states say rich nations have emitted most  greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution and must  extend Kyoto before poor countries can be expected to sign up.  Kyoto binds almost 40 nations to cut emissions by an average of  5.2 percent below 1990 levels during the five-year period  2008-12.

“We are putting great pressure on Japan to back down,” said  one developing country delegate.

s from Antigua and Barbuda, said that one option,  mentioned at previous talks, was simply to extend Kyoto beyond  2012 with the existing goals for cuts, rather than new ones.

“The current commitment period could be extended while we  sort out the question of the level of ambition,” he said. The  option had not been discussed yet in Cancun.

One draft suggested ways to ensure that developing  countries do more — a key demand of rich nations.

That might oblige emerging nations with more than 0.5 or 1  percent of world emissions, such as China and India, to report  emissions levels every two years. Currently, only rich nations  have to report emissions, annually.

The talks are trying to restore confidence after Copenhagen  soured relations between rich and poor in a world of shifting  influences. Developed nations are suffering from anemic growth  while growth in China and India is raising their power. The U.N. Environment Program reiterated yesterday that  planned cuts in greenhouse gases were far too small to meet a  non-binding goal set in Copenhagen of limiting a rise in world  temperatures to below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6F) above  pre-industrial times.