![]() |
|
| 29th July 2010 |
Copenhagen Blog - Face saving, not planet saving agreementWritten by George Lyon and published in the Steamie blog on Fri 18th Dec 2009 As talks in Copenhagen continue this evening, at least for the moment, spirits are rather low. America and China produce over 50% of the world's carbon emissions: any deal here tonight will require them work together. Unfortunately, there appears to be stalemate. Prior to today there was some hope that the US had come to the negotiating table ready to play ball. Hillary Clinton suggested that they might come forward with an offer of more money and concrete commitments. Unfortunately that looks like it was all posturing. President Obama instead used his speech simply to assert that the US is ready to do a deal if China and others are prepared to be transparent. China is refusing to budge. There's a bit of a culture clash here as the Chinese perceive international monitoring of their efforts as "snooping" and a breach of sovereignty, or at least that is the reason they are giving for refusing to open up. That is a real shame. China has to understand that economic development should go hand in hand with political maturity. It is in their own interests to play a full role in international affairs, including the fight against climate change. The draft Copenhagen Accord continues to look like a face saving, not a planet saving agreement. Even the leaders' "family photograph" has now been postponed indefinitely. We wait for more news.
Bookmark this story at:
Related Press Articles:Fri 18th Dec 2009: Copenhagen Blog - Slogans and pressure - what can Obama expect at COP15? Copenhagen Blog - Obama's speech moves US position by inches when we need him to go the extra mile Copenhagen Blog - EU 'red lines' in negotiations Copenhagen Blog - There will be no climate deal Copenhagen Blog - COP15 turns into cop out by world leaders Thu 17th Dec 2009: Copenhagen Blog - Finally arrived on the train, but will negotiations stay on track Copenhagen Blog - Clinton puts figure on developing nations fund for first time Published and promoted by Graeme Littlejohn on behalf of George Lyon MEP, all at 9 Newton Terrace, Glasgow, G3 7PJ The views expressed are those of the party, not of the service provider. |