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Highlights
from Tuesday, 5 September
Delegates to
the informal meetings preceding SB-13 met to consider: policies
and measures (P&Ms); technology transfer; land use, land-use
change and forestry (LULUCF); capacity building; compliance; FCCC
Article 4.8 and 4.9 and Protocol Article 3.14 (adverse effects);
the mechanisms; and guidelines under Protocol Articles 5 (methodological
issues), 7 (communication of information) and 8 (review of information).
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Policies
and Measures
Chair Jose Romero (Switzerland,
shown here on the right) outlined recent developments on
P&M, including results from the Copenhagen Workshop on Policies
and Measures (Click
here for the ENB Summary Report of the Workshop). He then
requested Parties to focus on developing a decision for COP-6. Chair
Romero called attention to EU proposed objectives and said
he would draft preliminary text for a draft decision and make it
available Thursday morning.
The
EU proposal outlines the following objectives:
- promote
exchange of experience and exchange of information on Policies
and Measures between all Parties, including developing ways of
improving their comparability, transparency and effectiveness
- identify
further opportunities for cooperation between Parties to enhance
the individual combined effectiveness
of Policies and Measures adopted under Protocol Article 2.
- identify
supplementary information needed to facilitate assessment of demonstrable
progress in 2005, in accordance with any decision taken under
Articles 5, 7 and 8 of the Kyoto Protocol
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Capacity
Development Initiative
Delegates met to makes general comments on
the GEF-UNDP Capacity Development Initiative (CDI), discussing in
particular the Country Capacity Development Needs and Priorities:
A Synthesis Report and the Regional Reports. SBI Chair John
Ashe said the aim of the informal meeting was to discuss the conclusions
of the CDI regional reviews. In the ensuing discussion, the G-77/China
and others questioned the mandate of the CDI and its relationship
to the intergovernmental process. Following an introduction to the
CDI regional assessments, smaller groups were convened to discuss
reports of the regional reviews. The group then broke into five
regional groups: Africa, Asia (except Central Asia), Eastern Europe
and Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean (except SIDS), and Small
Island Developing States (SIDS).
Above
photo, from left to right: Gao Pronove and Janos Pastor, UNFCCC
Secretariat, John Ashe, SBI Chair, and Havani Vaish, GEF. Below
left: Delegates waiting outside the meeting room for the group on
CDI to convene. Below right: delegates meeting in a very full conference
room.
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LULUCF
Delegates outlined Party submissions on LULUCF
contained in a consolidated synthesis document presented by the
Secretariat (FCCC/SBSTA/2000/9). Delegates discussed proposed definitions
of forests and afforestation, reforestation and deforestation, as
well as issues regarding accounting.
Right:
Co-chair Philip Gwage, Uganda (center)
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Mechanisms
Chair Kok Kee Chow gave a presentation on
the CDM: Institutional Issues. Delegates
also discussed a draft rules of procedure of the Executive Board
of the CDM. The structure of the presentation
was as follows:
- responsibilities
and authorities of COP/MOP and the EB as in Article 12
- tasks and
functions of the EB, as proposed by parties in SB/2000/4
- tasks and
functions of COP/MOP, as proposed by Parties in SB/2000/4
- rules and
procedures of EB, as contained in SB/2000/4 and existing international
agreement
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Greenpeace
Solar Panels
Greenpeace
exhibited solar paneling outside the Conference center and discussed
the issue with delegates who stopped by. Greenpeace distributed
a paper stating that the environmental integrity of the Kyoto Protocol
is at stake and urged countries to take decisions that do not create
loopholes, which Greenpeace fears could lead to little or no action
being required from industrialized countries.
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The
Lyon Information Desk where delegates can pick up free bus passes
and find out what is happening outside the conference center
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In
the corridors...
Some participants
have expressed concern at the apparent lack of urgency for making substantial
progress on Articles 5, 7 and 8. Given the heavy workload facing this
group, observers warn that a lack of movement in working through remaining
text could prove problematic later on.
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