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May 27, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 

Rich and poor clash in Copenhagen over money

Chinese employees work next to a well drill at a PetroChina oil field in Daqing, Heilongjiang province, on Wednesday. China led calls by developing nations for deeper emissions cuts from the United States, Japan and Europe at UN climate talks in Copenhagen, Denmark.
10 December 2009 / AP, COPANHAGEN
Negotiators on Wednesday worked to bridge the chasm between rich and poor countries over how to share the burden of fighting climate change, and a top US envoy was to highlight the Obama administration’s efforts to curb greenhouse emissions.
Lumumba Di-Aping of Sudan, the head of the 135-nation bloc of developing countries, said the $10 billion a year that has been proposed to help poor nations fight climate change paled in comparison to the more than $1 trillion already spent to rescue financial institutions. “If this is the greatest risk that humanity faces, then how do you explain $10 billion?” he said. “Ten billion will not buy developing countries’ citizens enough coffins.”

US Environmental Protection Agency head Lisa Jackson, whose agency just gave President Barack Obama a new way to cut back on greenhouse gas emissions, took to the podium at the UN climate conference later Wednesday, headlining a US-sponsored meeting entitled “Taking Action at Home.” The EPA determined on Monday that scientific evidence clearly shows greenhouse gases are endangering Americans’ health and must be regulated. That gave Obama a new way to regulate those gases without needing the approval of the US Congress.

Obama will join more than 100 national leaders converging on Copenhagen for the final days of bargaining late next week.

Chinese protest  

China, which has recently overtaken the United States as the world’s top greenhouse gas emitter, strongly protested on Wednesday a blunder that prevented a top diplomat from entering the vast Bella Center where the 192-nation UN climate conference is being held. Su Wei, the director general of China’s climate change negotiation team, told the meeting he was “extremely unhappy” that a Chinese minister was barred from entry three days in a row.

Su called the incident “unacceptable” and expressed anger that UN climate chief Yvo de Boer was not informed. De Boer pledged to investigate and “make sure it doesn’t happen again.” Meanwhile, small island nations, poor countries and those seeking money from the developed world to preserve their tropical forests were among those upset over competing draft texts attributed to Denmark and China outlining proposed outcomes for the historic Dec. 7-18 summit.

 
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