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Update:
Informal climate change consultations held Saturday, 21 April
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A
feeling of inertia and lack of progress permeated the high-level
informal consultations on climate change held Friday evening,
20 April and Saturday, 21 April, at New York's Waldorf Astoria
Hotel, attended by some 40 environment ministers. The meeting
was convened to: express support for the Kyoto Protocol as the
framework for international climate change negotiations; provide
feedback on UNFCCC COP-6 President Jan Pronk's proposal on ways
to advance key political questions to be resolved at COP-6 bis;
and chart a way forward, following recent US pronouncements against
the Protocol. During the discussions, delegates questioned the
US position, noting, in particular, new findings that suggest
that implementation costs are lower than initially anticipated,
and underlining the fact that the US is the world's largest emitter
of greenhouse gases. The US is currently engaged in a Cabinet-level
policy review, the results of which are to be presented at COP-6
bis in Bonn in July. The policy review process is considering
working from a different track to that of the Protocol, particularly
regarding developing country commitments and the IPCC's scientific
findings on, inter alia, the duration and location of climate
change consequences. Some participants are said to have urged
for a middle ground instead of confronting the US, and there are
also indications that there was a willingness to show greater
flexibility on sinks within the clean development mechanism. Regarding
Pronk's proposal, developing countries apparently expressed displeasure
at not being consulted, and indicated a preference for Pronk's
first proposal developed soon after COP-6. They urged Pronk to
convene a meeting to discuss adaptation and the proposal prior
to COP-6 bis. Further consultations are expected to take place
in Stockholm, Sweden, during the diplomatic conference for the
signing of the POPs Convention in May 2001. Photo:
Dutch Environment Minister and COP President Jan Pronk
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CSD
Chair Beldrich Moldan opened the interactive dialogue, which addressed
the questions: How successfully have we integrated sustainable
development into our policies? What experiences can we share in
this regard? What is the way forward?
In
his closing remarks, Chair Moldan commended Ministers
on their productive early morning informals, and summarized the
key points raised during this week's High-level Segments, inter
alia: new mechanisms for financing, including micro-level and
public-private partnerships; poverty eradication as sustainable
development's main goal; the need for renewable energy technologies,
especially for decentralized rural electrification; near-unanimous
support for the Kyoto Protocol; the need for effective land use
planning that incorporates the transport requirements of women;
the use of scientifically-based information for transparent decision
making; capacity building to overcome the digital divide; and
a renewed global commitment to sustainable development at the
2002 Summit.
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The
US delegation speaks with Under Secretary General Nitin Desai, (left)
and Mark Hambley, US, speaks with Gail
V. Karlsson, UNDP (right)
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French
Environment Minister Dominique Voynet, noted
the need to review the development model and said that the long
term challenge is the achievement of fair growth, that a major
concern is how to ensure that lifestyles change every day, and
that although the Kyoto Protocol is not perfect, it is the only
agreement to combat climate change and associated disasters, and
thus would not allow "ourselves to be destabilized or distracted
by the unilateral position of one state that is a major consumer
of hydrocarbons."
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Alhaji
Mohammed Kabir Sai'd, Minister of Environment, Nigeria, elaborated
on the energy and transport initiatives it had undertaken, said Nigeria
support the use of voluntary indicators, but stressed the involvement,
and called for support on the use of the Internet and World Wide Web,
technology transfer, capacity building and funding. He said all issues
to be addressed in the 2002 Summit should be discussed by the CSD
preparatory committees. |
Ahmed
Bouhaouli, Secretary-General of the Department of Environment,
Morocco Underlining
his country's vulnerability to climate change impacts, he called,
inter alia, for: immediate implementation of international obligations
regarding the transfer of financial resources and technology transfer;
programmes that promote renewables; and better co-ordination of
international environmental governance, welcoming UNEP's actions
on this.
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Y.F.O.
Masakhalia, Minister for Energy, Kenya Noting the recent
Africa High-level Regional Meeting on Energy and Sustainable Development,
he highlighted: accessibility to energy, the development of RETs
and advanced fossil-fuel technologies, and ensuring an integrated
approach to rural development. He outlined the African Energy Ministers
Programme of Action which includes: promoting energy efficiency
and conservation; developing RETs; establishing a regional data-base;
harmonizing energy standards and procedures; intensifying exploration
and development of natural gas; and developing a regulatory framework
for the energy privatization process.
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Francisco
Reyes, Vice-Minister of Transport, Cuba,
underlined
the growing inequity of resource distribution, increasing environmental
degradation and "the absurd models of consumption being imposed
on us." He highlighted the principal responsibility of developed
countries, advocated the development of advanced fossil fuel technologies,
and rejected the US position on Kyoto which he suggested "shows
the shortsightedness and arrogance for which they are known."
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The
delegate from Iraq recalled the Secretary-General's report
on the impact of the economic embargoes on energy provision, and
asked whether it is not time for the CSD to tack measures on such
action that "is killing development." He said "we have been
a victim of our own ambitions in our own development."
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On
information for decision-making, the Philippines noted the
asymmetries regarding access to information, and noted the implicit
reliance of multi-lateral financing institutions and business on
the market.
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Ambassador
Hasmy Agam, Malaysia
Drawing
attention to the financial crisis in South East Asia a while ago,
he highlighted the challenges of globalization on developing countries,
noting the need for developing country resilience in the integration
process, called for consideration of globalization as a cross-cutting
issue during the session and in the 2002 Summit and said the CSD
should be a step ahead of developments within and outside the
UN to ensure it not a moribund institution
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Luis
Filipe da Silva, Minister of Energy, Angola, highlighted problems
relating to the shortage of investment capital, inadequate management
skills, and the lack of access to energy sources and improved technologies,
and underlined the role of women in rural areas.
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Bozo
Kovacevic, Minister of Environmental Protection and Physical Planning,
Croatia
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Burkina
Faso highlighted the challenges and strategies to meet the country's
energy demands, the relation between transport and energy and, noting
the lack of private sector investments in energy provision due to
unprofitability, he called for international cooperation in capacity
building, technology transfer and resource provision. He also drew
attention to the multidimensional nature of transport and energy
problems.
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Janez
Kopac, Minister of Environment and Spatial Planning, Slovenia Outlining
recent initiatives in his country, including introducing a carbon
dioxide tax, he emphasized: integrating the environment into other
policy areas; substituting fossil fuels with renewables; and promoting
energy efficiency and broad partnerships.
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The
delegation from Cote d'Ivoire |
Beat
Nobbs, Switzerland, speaks with the Republic of Korea
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