Hopes fade for Mexico climate talks

OSLO, (Reuters) – Hopes for a deal on climate change  at U.N. talks in Mexico next month have faded, undermined by  splits between America and China and by fears the 194-nation  process is too unwieldy to work out a pact to slow global  warming.

Experts told the Reuters Global Climate and Alternative  Energy Summit the Nov. 29-Dec. 10 annual meeting of environment  ministers in Cancun might at best agree steps such as a new fund  to help poor nations or ways to share green technology.

But there are risks of deadlock.

“If Cancun is a big disappointment, achieving nothing or not  much, then I think a lot of governments around the world will  start to say: What comes out of this process?” European Climate  Commissioner Connie Hedegaard said.

“The world’s citizens will be sick and tired if all we  achieve at Cancun is a blame game over who is to blame for not  doing anything,” she said.

Most nations gave hopes of a quick all-encompassing treaty  to curb greenhouse gases after world leaders at a 2009 summit in  Copenhagen failed to work out a deal to avert projected heat  waves, floods, droughts and rising sea levels.
Even a patchwork of smaller deals is now not certain for  Cancun.

“We are in a very, very troubling situation,” said Achim  Steiner, head of the U.N. Environment Programme, saying many  nations blamed the economic downturn for less action.

But he predicted that factors including more extreme  weather, such as the floods in Pakistan or the drought in Russia  that pushed up grain prices, would eventually bring global  cooperation on a binding U.N. deal.

Christiana Figueres, head of the U.N. Climate Change  Secretariat, said that the Copenhagen summit had taught the  world that there was no “magic bullet” to solve climate change.

She said Cancun can agree a set of decisions — such as on  finance, technology or measures to protect tropical forests —  that might be turned into a formal treaty at later meetings.

“Governments do need to double their efforts between now and  Cancun,” she said.

Some experts say the talks could shift from the United  Nations to other groups, such as the G20 which includes all big  emitters — China, the United States, the European Union, Russia  and India.

“The talks are going nowhere,” said Bjorn Lomborg, Danish  author of “The Skeptical Environmentalist”. He said the world  should abandon the U.N. process and agree to invest $100 billion  a year in new clean technologies such as wind or solar power.

Figueres and Steiner said it was wrong to predict the demise  of the U.N. track.

An objection to groups such as the G20 or G8 was that they  excluded 3 or 4 billion people in poor nations, from Bangladesh  to small island states in the Pacific, who have done little to  cause global warming but are most at risk.

The world cannot afford to ignore their views, Steiner said.

“The multilateral process is … cumbersome and necessarily  a slow process … but absolutely indispensable,” Figueres said.

Last week in China, a final round of preparatory talks for  Cancun was hit by disputes between Beijing and Washington, the  top greenhouse gas emitters, about how to share out  responsibility for combating climate change.