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INTERVIEW-Sense of urgency greater over climate deal-UK
11 Sep 2007 18:33:01 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Sylvia Westall

BERLIN, Sept 11 (Reuters) - The world is at last waking up to the perils of climate change but time is running out to translate that realisation into serious action, Britain's environment minister Hilary Benn said on Tuesday.

Diplomats hope that a meeting in Indonesia in December of U.N. environment ministers will agree to start talks to find a successor to the Kyoto Protocol, the only global deal on cutting climate warming carbon emissions but which expires in 2012.

"Time is not on our side and frankly we've just got to get on with it," Benn told Reuters on the margins of a two-day meeting in Berlin of environment and energy ministers from the group of 20 (G20) nations.

"I think there is a recognition that we absolutely have to launch the process at Bali. It's been encouraging in that sense," he said of the meeting's progress.

But success is far from guaranteed.

Kyoto took five years to negotiate and another eight to come into force -- a timeframe that, if repeated, scientists say would push the world deep into unknown climate territory.

Scientists say global average temperatures will rise by between 1.8 and 4 degrees Celsius this century unless urgent action is taken to curb emissions of so-called greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels for power and transport.

But the world's top polluter the United States rejected Kyoto as economic suicide and has made repeated efforts to undermine it.

At the same time booming carbon emitters such as China and India are not bound by the treaty and are resisting calls for them to agree to binding cut targets under any successor deal.

Germany has said a new deal must be decided by the end of 2009 at the latest. But even that is very tight if ratification is to take place before 2012. "We've had some really straight talking over the past couple of days," was all Benn would say when asked if the end of 2009 deal deadline remained a possibility.

The United States has called a meeting of major emitter nations at the end of September -- a move welcomed by some as evidence President George W. Bush has finally got the climate message and rejected by others as a bid to undermine Bali.

Benn, who was appointed head of the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in June as part of Prime Minister Gordon Brown's new cabinet, emphasised that the Bali talks should be at the centre of climate negotiations.

"The British government really welcomes the fact that the United States is now engaged in this way because that does represent a change from before," Benn said.

"But the other thing that was extremely clear about the discussions over the past few days is a shared recognition of the primacy of the United Nations," he said. "That is where it is going to have to be done and no one argues about that."
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A devotee carries an idol of Lord Ganesha, the Hindu deity of prosperity, for immersion in the Arabian Sea in Mumbai September 25, 2007. The immersion of thousands of statues of Hindu gods containing toxic chemicals into India's rivers and lakes every year poses a pollution threat as festivals become increasingly commercialised, environmentalists said. Hindus across India celebrate various religious festivals in September and October, paying homage to deities like Lord Ganesha, the remover of obstacles, and Goddess Durga, the destroyer of evil. Elaborately painted and decorated idols are worshipped before mass processions take them to nearby rivers, lakes and the sea where they are immersed in accordance with Hindu faith.



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