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May 27, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 

United Nations climate talks stall after African protest over Kyoto

Danish police arrest demonstrators in Copenhagen as the largest and most important UN climate change conference continues in the Danish capital.
15 December 2009 / REUTERS, COPENHAGEN
The main session of UN climate talks in Copenhagen stalled on Monday after African nations accused rich countries of trying to kill the existing UN Kyoto Protocol.
Talks failed to start as planned at 10:30 GMT due to the African protest. The session was to seek ways to end deadlock on core issues, four days before about 110 world leaders aim to agree a new climate deal to limit global warming that scientists say will bring more heat waves, floods and rising sea levels.

“This is a walk-out over process and form, not a walkout over substance, and that’s regrettable,” Australian Climate Change Minister Penny Wong said of the protest by African nations at the Dec. 7-18 meeting. “A range of developing countries have expressed their concerns and acted accordingly. This is not the time for people to play procedural games. We need to resolve the process issues and get onto the substance,” she said.

African nations accused rich nations of trying to kill the UN’s existing Kyoto Protocol for cutting greenhouse gases. They said the outline of the talks planned on Monday would sideline their concerns. Developed countries are trying to “collapse” the entire 192-nation talks, Kamel Djemouai, an Algerian official who heads the African group, told a news conference. He said that plans by rich nations “means that we are going to accept the death of the only one legally binding instrument that exists now,” referring to Kyoto. Other African delegates also said the rich wanted to “kill Kyoto.”

Yvo de Boer, head of the UN Climate Change Secretariat, predicted that the negotiations would get back on track in early afternoon. “The vast majority of countries here want to see the continuation of the Kyoto Protocol,” he said. “I’m not aware that any countries are trying to block anything.”

De Boer said that Danish Minister Connie Hedegaard, presiding at the meeting, would hold talks to appoint environment ministers to try to break deadlock in key areas, such as the depth of cuts in greenhouse gas emissions by developed nations by 2020, and cash to help the poor.

Developing nations want to extend the existing Kyoto Protocol, which obliges rich nations except the United States to cut emissions of greenhouse gases until 2012, and work out a separate new deal for developing nations.

 
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