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- Info
0109
media advisory
friends of the earth international
january 9, 2006
sydney climate change talks do not
address climate change
Sydney (Australia) January 9, 2006. A Climate
Change meeting attended by top officials from
Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea
and the US to be held in Sydney from 11-13
January will focus on voluntary instead of
compulsory measures to reduce climate
change-causing emissions. [1]
Agreements on such voluntary action will
prove meaningless in the face of efforts
needed to address the scale of the problem,
according to Friends of the Earth
International. [2]
The meeting was initially planned for
November 2005 in Adelaide and then postponed.
In a desperate attempt to revive the ‘Pacific
Partnership for Clean Development and
Climate’ meeting in Sydney, Australian
Environment Minister Ian Campbell declared
the so-called Kyoto Protocol on Climate
Change dead, despite the fact that world
leaders reached on 10 December 2005 in
Montreal (Canada) a historic agreement on
future action to tackle climate change under
the Protocol. [3]
“Minister Campbell was at the Montreal talks
and is purposefully misleading the Australian
people and international community in a
desperate bid to gain support for the meeting
in Sydney,” said Friends of the Earth
Australia’s climate spokesperson Stephanie
Long.
“From Australian Senate Estimates
transcripts, it is increasingly evident that
this Asia Pacific partnership is a deal of no
substance. Australian Bureaucrats could
provide no details of funding, membership
conditions or committed emissions reduction
actions of the partnership” said Ms.
Long.
The Asia-Pacific Partnership for Clean
Development and Climate, was announced in
July 2005 and brings together Australia,
China, India, Japan, South Korea and the US,
to look to develop technologies to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions rather than setting
specific targets to reduce them.
The partnership, established through secret
talks, was led by Australia and the US.
Neither country has signed the Kyoto
Protocol. They are the only major global
polluters not to take on legally binding
targets. It is not yet clear which
technologies are being considered in the
partnership or if any new financial support
will be available for their development.
“While the Australian government argues that
this partnership will succeed where Kyoto has
failed, they have yet to explain how this
would be possible without market regulation
to drive investment in greenhouse friendly
technologies. A deal on technology, supported
by voluntary measures to reduce emissions,
will not address climate change,” said
Friends of the Earth International Climate
Campaigner, Catherine Pearce.
Friends of the Earth International believes
that both Australia and the American
Administration are using this partnership to
undermine efforts under Kyoto, deflecting
attention away from their appalling inaction
on climate change and to secure the coal
markets in Asia on which their economies are
increasingly dependent.
for further comment
Friends of the Earth International Climate
Campaigner Catherine Pearce
Tel: + 44 (0)20 7566 1723 Mobile: + 44
(0)7811 283641
Friends of the Earth Australia International
Climate Justice Spokesperson Stephanie
Long
Tel: + 61 (0) 2 6680 3337
notes to editors
[1] US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
along with Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman and
presidential adviser James Connaughton
planned to meet in Sydney, Australia, 11-13
January, with representatives from five Asian
and Pacific nations. Along with the U.S,
these countries account for nearly half the
world's population, energy use, greenhouse
gas emissions and economic output. However,
Ms Rice announced she cancelled her trip to
observe the progress of President Sharon’s
health after his recent stoke.**
[2] Asia-Pacific Partnership for Clean
Development and Climate vision statement
available at:
http://www.state.gov/g/oes/rls/fs/50335.htm
[3]* *To prevent climate catastrophe, it is
essential that the Montreal deal will lead to
significantly deeper cuts in climate
change-causing emissions after 2012, when the
first phase of the Kyoto Protocol ends.
background information
available at
http://www.foe.org.au/climate
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