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US last in G8 climate scorecard

2008-07-03 20:12
line

Berlin - The US has done the least among the world's eight largest economies to address global warming, a study released on Thursday found.

The G8 Climate Scorecards 2008, released on Thursday ahead of next week's gathering of the Group of Eight on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido, also found that none of the eight countries are making improvements large enough to prevent temperature increases that scientists think would cause catastrophic climate changes.

The gathering includes the heads of states of the US, Japan, Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Canada and Russia.

Regine Guenther, director of the World Wildlife Fund Climate Change Programme in Germany, told reporters in the German capital that G8 leaders should commit to reducing emissions in their countries by 40% by 2020 and 80% by 2050.

"If we don't achieve that, the world's climate will change in ways that we can't even imagine today," Guenther said.

The scorecard ranked Britain as the developed nation that has done the most to reduce carbon dioxide emissions and reach targets set by the Kyoto Protocol. France and Germany are close behind. Germany was praised for its investment in renewable energy.

"But all three countries are at best half as far along the road as they should be," a statement announcing the study said.

Britain ranked number one

The scorecard was compiled by Ecofys, a Dutch consulting company, and commissioned by the World Wildlife Fund and insurer Allianz SE.

Joachim Faber, an Allianz board member who helped compile the scorecards, said a global emissions trading market is important to fighting climate change, and that the EU should lead its development.

"The EU-specific trading system we have at the moment must serve as a model system for one that we can find outside the EU, for the world economy," he said.

The study criticised low energy efficiency in the US, but said there was hope in legislation under consideration by Congress and initiatives led by non-governmental groups.

The study also analysed - but did not rank - five of the world's fastest growing economies: Brazil, China, India, Mexico and SA. "These countries cannot be measured with the same ruler as industrialised countries," the statement said.

- AP

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Latest comment in Sci-Tech

Don says... First, "greenhouse gas emissions" are fake and are being used by Governments to generate cash. That's all. Secondly; the very important issue here is not whether electric vehicles cut those emissions, but we are loosing sight of their most important contribution... non-reliance on imported, expensive, dwindling reserves of foreign oil. Get real! We can't all survive by riding cycles to work. In fact, if we don't get an alternative to our dependence on oil, there will be no work. No food transported, etc, etc. Bring on electric cars now, then maybe hydrogen in the near future. Read the article...

 
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