UN climate talks agree modest package

CANCUN, Mexico, (Reuters) – Almost 200 nations  agreed today to modest steps to combat climate change,  including a new fund to help poor countries, and put off major  disputes until 2011 and beyond.
“This is a new era of international cooperation on climate  change,” Mexican Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa told  delegates at the end of two weeks of talks after breaking the  deadlock between rich and poor countries.

Patricia Espinosa
Patricia Espinosa

The deal, reached at marathon overnight talks, comprises a  plan to design a Green Climate Fund, measures to protect  tropical forests and ways to share clean energy technologies  and help developing nations adapt to climate change.
It also reaffirms a goal of raising an annual $100 billion  in aid for poor countries by 2020 and sets a target of limiting  a rise in average world temperatures to below 2 degrees Celsius  (3.6F) over pre-industrial times.
“The most important thing is that the multilateral process  has received a shot in the arm, it had reached an historic low.  It will fight another day,” said Indian Environment Minister  Jairam Ramesh. “It could yet fail.”
The talks had lowered expectations after U.S. President  Barack Obama and other world leaders failed to agree on a  treaty at a summit in Copenhagen last year. Cancun sets no firm  deadlines for an elusive legally binding accord.
Britain’s energy and climate secretary Chris Huhne said  that Cancun made it more likely that the European Union would  toughen cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, to 30 percent below  1990 levels from a current 20 percent.
“I think it definitely makes an agreement on 30 percent in  the EU more likely,” he said of the EU contribution to avert  what the U.N. panel of climate scientists says will be more  floods, droughts, desertification, mudslides and rising ocean  levels.
Espinosa banged down her gavel on today’s accord despite  objections by Bolivia, which wanted to demand far deeper cuts  in greenhouse gases by rich nations, saying their climate  policies were causing “genocide” with 300,000 deaths a year.
“I urge you to reconsider,” Bolivian delegate Pablo Solon  told Espinosa. After repeated anti-capitalist speeches by  Solon, Espinosa retorted that Bolivia’s objections would be  noted in a final report but could not derail the accord by 190  nations.
The deal was unlocked after delegates simply put off until  2011 and 2012 a dispute between rich and poor nations over the  future of the U.N.’s Kyoto Protocol, which obliges almost 40  rich nations to cut emissions in a first period until  end-2012.
“Cancun may have saved the process but it did not yet save  the climate,” said Wendel Trio of Greenpeace.
Japan, Canada and Russia insisted at the talks that they  will not extend Kyoto, demanding instead that all major  emitters including the United States, China and India also join  in a new global deal.
But developing nations say that rich Kyoto countries, which  have burned the most fossil fuels since the Industrial  Revolution, have to extend the agreement beyond 2012 before the  poor agree to measures to curb their emissions.
Washington never signed up for Kyoto, arguing that it  wrongly omitted targets for developing nations and would cost  U.S. jobs. Obama’s hopes of legislating cuts have vanished  after Republican gains in mid-term elections.
Many of the accords from Cancun simply firm up non-binding  deals from Copenhagen, which were endorsed by only 140 nations.  Todd Stern, the U.S. climate envoy, said the steps taken in  Copenhagen were “carried forward in a really exceptional way  here today.”
“It’s really pretty historic,” said Christiana Figueres,  head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat.
“It’s the first time that countries have agreed to such a  broad set of instruments and tools that are going to help  developing countries in particular,” she said.