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Climate talks begin

2005-11-29 10:25
line

Montreal - Envoys from more than 180 nations on Monday held crucial talks here on the United Nations Kyoto Protocol on curbing greenhouse gases, amid warnings from scientists and environmentalists that climate change could have profound consequences.

"People who have sent their delegates here want real progress," insisted Canadian environment minister Stephane Dion.

The 12-day gathering of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is expected to draw between 8 000 and 10 000 participants from governments, businesses, science and green groups.

Its challenge will be to frame the first steps for crafting pledges on greenhouse-gas pollution after the present "commitment period" of the Kyoto Protocol runs out in 2012.

Sources close to the meeting expected the United States to take a hard line, pushing ahead with its demands for the gases to tackled by a voluntary approach, rather than by a legal cap, as is the case with Kyoto's present format.

The US delegation is expected notably to fight demands to spur negotiations for the post-2012 period.

Global warming a threat

Meanwhile, Lord May, the president of Britain's leading scientific body, the Royal Society, warned that global warming was an apocalyptic peril whose effects are already visible.

The environmental groups Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth warned that the window of opportunity was closing fast.

"Extreme weather events, drought and rising sea levels threaten the lives and livelihoods of millions of people around the world. Negotiators must remember this as they enter these talks," said Catherine Pearce of Friends of the Earth International.

Greenpeace campaigner Steve Sawyer said the meeting urgently had to give a sign that binding caps would remain post-2012, otherwise the world's fledgling market in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions could be wrecked.

UN representative Richard Kinley urged industrialised nations to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions that are contributing to global warming.

But experts pointed out that developing countries like China and India will now have to contribute to anti-pollution controls.

Bid to reduce carbon dioxide

The Montreal meeting is the first by the convention since the Kyoto Protocol, signed by 156 countries, took effect in February.

The pact commits industrialised nations to making specific cuts in carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases that trap solar heat, thus warming the planet's surface and disrupting its delicate climate system.

But the present commitment period does not include the planet's worst polluter, the United States, which walked away from the protocol in 2001 because of the high cost of meeting its Kyoto targets.

Nor does it include fast-growing developing countries, such as China and India, in its pledge on targeted reductions.

The present Kyoto period is only just a tiny first step towards tackling greenhouse gases that have increased dramatically in recent decades as fossil fuels are burned to power economic growth.

Atmospheric CO2 levels are now at the highest in 650 000 years, scientists say, and 2005 is likely to go into history books as the warmest year on record.

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Latest comment in Sci-Tech

colin.megson says... Let coal decline - we all want it to. But for nuclear, the answer is so simple - generate our electricity and process heat using high temperature reactors which, if the 'waste' heat can't be put to a useful purpose, can be air cooled. However, high temperature 'waste' heat can be used to desalinate, to produce vast quantities of potable water from brackish groundwater and seawater. It can also be used to implement a hydrogen economy, whereby all liquid fuels can be made carbon neutral, by using atmospheric CO2 in their production. Likewise carbon-neutral ammonia can be made from atmospheric N2 and used as feed stock for fertilisers, to maintain agricultural production to feed 9 billion people. There is one outstanding reactor that can do all of this and also is inherently safe - it shuts down according to the laws of physics, even if all safety systems and all electrics are lost. The fuel in the reactor core starts life in the molten state, so no more TMI or Fukushima-Diiachi style meltdowns. It operates at atmospheric pressure, so there is no high powered 'driver' available to expel radiotoxic substances upwards and outwards into the environment. Also, its fuel is thorium - 3½ X more common than uranium and in sufficient abundance to be economically available until the end of time. This silver-bullet answer to the most significant problems facing humankind, is the Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR). Google: LFTRs to Power the Planet for all of the benefits. Read the article...

 
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