Bush sets global climate meeting
By Matt Spetalnick
Fri Aug 3, 10:31 AM ET
The Bush administration unveiled plans on Friday
for global warming talks next month that will bring together the world's
biggest polluters to seek agreement on reducing greenhouse gases.
U.S. President George W. Bush has invited the
European Union, the United Nations and 11 other countries to the September
27-28 meeting in Washington to work toward setting a long-term goal by 2008 to
cut emissions.
Under fire for resisting tougher action on global
warming, Bush proposed the conference in late May before a summit of the Group
of Eight industrial nations in Germany, but had withheld details.
In a letter to invitees obtained by Reuters, Bush
assured them that "the United States is committed to collaborating with
other major economies" to agree on a framework for reducing gas emissions
blamed for global climate change.
But a senior U.S. official said the administration
stood by its opposition to mandatory economy-wide caps. Many climate experts
say that without binding U.S. emissions targets, the chance for significant
progress is limited.
Bush agreed with other leaders of the G8 in June to
make "substantial" but unspecified reductions in climate-warming
emissions and to negotiate a new global climate pact that would extend and
broaden the Kyoto Protocol beyond 2012.
But Bush has refused to sign up to numerical targets
before rising powers like China and India make similar pledges. Convincing them
to join the U.N. process will be crucial to reversing a rise in global
temperatures.
China and India are both invited to the September
conference, together with Japan, Canada, Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, Russia,
Australia, Indonesia and South Africa. The EU delegation will include
representatives from France, Germany, Italy and Britain, the U.S. official
said.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will host the
meeting.
FIRST IN SERIES OF MEETINGS
"At this meeting, we would seek agreement on
the process by which the major economies would, by the end of 2008, agree upon
a post-2012 framework that could include a long-term goal, nationally defined
mid-term goals and strategies and sector-based approaches for improving energy
security and reducing greenhouse gas emissions," Bush wrote.
Bush said he would deliver the opening speech and
asked countries to send senior officials to the conference, which he touted as
the first in a "series of meetings throughout 2008 to further refine our
plans and accelerate our progress."
The U.S. official, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said extensive contacts had already been made and the administration
is confident all the invitees will attend.
Bush's position on climate change has evolved from
questioning the science linking human activity to global warming in 2001 to
agreeing more recently to work with the world's biggest emitters of greenhouse
gases and others to formulate international goals by the end of 2008, shortly
before his White House tenure ends.
But Bush blocked German-led efforts at the G8
summit to secure agreement on 50 percent cuts from 1990 levels by 2050.
He remains opposed to hard limits on U.S.
emissions, maintaining this would put American business at a disadvantage
internationally.
However, experts say hard limits are needed to
provide the essential trigger for a market in which industry would be forced to
clean up or pay for the right to pollute.
Bush resisted pressure for fixed emissions
reduction targets at the G8 summit, though he agreed to fold his own climate
plans into the U.N. framework.
But he is likely to be out of office by the time
any post-Kyoto deal is clinched and U.S. participation will depend on big
polluters like China and India joining in.
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