Ministers Unable to Reach Agreement at Climate
Change Conference
Expect to resume talks next year in
Bonn
- November 25, 2000
- By Jim Fuller
- Washington File Science Correspondent
The Hague - Environment ministers and diplomats from more than 180
countries suspended their intensive negotiations November 25 after failing
to reach agreement on guidelines for reducing heat-trapping greenhouse
gases believed responsible for global warming.
Conference delegates have been meeting at the Netherlands Congress
Center in The Hague for two weeks -- culminating in a last-ditch,
all-night session on the final day -- in an effort to hammer out detailed
rules for implementing a climate change treaty negotiated in Kyoto,
Japan, three years ago.
Conference officials said, however, that the delegates were so close
to reaching an accord that they have agreed to resume the conference
early next year.
Conference President Jan Pronk, environment minister of The
Netherlands, told delegates at the final plenary session that while he
was disappointed that an agreement on the rules had not been reached,
he held out hope for the near future.
"Personally, I am very disappointed," Pronk said. "I think we are all
quite disappointed. And we should be aware that we have been watched --
watched by the outside world. There were extremely high expectations
.... We must confess today that we have not lived up to the expectations
from the outside world.
"But I believe that the political will to succeed is still alive,
and I am confident that we can regroup in the very near future, and
complete a deal that leads to effective actions to control emissions and
protect the most vulnerable countries from the impacts of global warming,"
Pronk added.
Klaus Topfer, executive director of the U.N. Environment Program,
told delegates, "It is better to suspend the talks and resume later to
ensure that we find the right path forward, rather than take a hasty
step that moves us in the wrong direction."
The delegates agreed to resume the sixth session of the Conference of
Parties to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change -- the formal
name as The Hague conference -- possibly as soon as late May in Bonn.
The 1997 Kyoto Protocol calls on developed countries to collectively
reduce their greenhouse gas emissions -- mainly carbon dioxide from
the burning of fossil fuels -- by at least 5 percent below 1990 levels
by 2012. Under the treaty, which has not yet been ratified by any
industrialized countries, the United States would cut emissions by 7
percent below 1990 levels, Europe by 8 percent and Japan by 6 percent.
Scientists say that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are
gradually accumulating in the atmosphere, forcing the Earth to heat
up. They say the warming can lead to increased droughts, severe storms
and a rise in sea levels.
Pronk said the conference made progress towards outlining a package of
financial support and technology transfer to help developing countries
adapt to the adverse impacts of climate change -- such as a rise in
sea levels.
He emphasized, however, that key political issues, including an
international emissions trading system, the rules for counting emissions
reductions from carbon "sinks" -- such as forests -- and a compliance
regime could not be resolved in the time available. Another issue that was
not resolved, according to Pronk, were rules for setting up the so-called
clean development mechanism, which would allow developed countries to
meet a portion of their emissions reduction targets by funding clean
energy projects in developing countries.
Officials reported that one of the main stumbling blocks at The Hague
negotiations was the fact that the United States and the European Union
(EU) remained divided on several key protocol provisions -- including the
amount of credit a country could get by investing in climate-protection
projects abroad and how much credit toward emissions cuts could be gained
by using forests to absorb carbon dioxide.
Frank Loy, under secretary of state for global affairs and head of the
U.S. delegation, said in a prepared statement that an agreement between
the two sides on key issues appeared to be "close at hand" by the morning
of November 25 following all-night negotiations, but by the afternoon
"the agreement we believed we had this morning" did not materialize.
"The United States is deeply disappointed -- because these issues
are of such profound importance, and because we came so close, only
to see our efforts unravel," Loy said. "We stand ready to resume our
negotiations at any time."
Loy went on to say that the elements of an agreement were sitting on
the table "in plain sight. It included some of the toughest issues --
sinks, compliance and ensuring strong domestic action. We were ready
to sign on to that agreement -- others could not. But we stand ready
to pick up where we left off."
Late on November 23, with conference negotiators deadlocked on key
issues, conference president Pronk submitted a compromise proposal that
he said would require all sides to make sacrifices.
The proposal was mainly intended to bridge the long-standing
differences between U.S. and European Union negotiators. But both sides
rejected the plan as unacceptable.
The Pronk compromise proposal suggested limiting the use of sinks
-- existing forests and croplands that absorb carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere. The proposed limits would have cut in half the emissions
reduction credits from sinks that were being sought by the United
States.
The Pronk proposal also suggested that countries achieve a significant
portion of their emissions cuts through domestic programs that scale back
the burning of fossil fuels in power plants, factories and automobiles --
rather than through international emissions trading.
While this proposal was roughly in line with the EU negotiation
position, U.S. negotiators had been pressing for unlimited emissions
trading, which would allow companies to buy and sell carbon credits or
invest in clean technologies abroad to reach their emissions reduction
targets.
According to a top-level U.S. negotiator at the conference, because
strong U.S. economic growth in recent years has expanded its share of
carbon emissions, the United States would have to reduce its domestic
emissions by "an extremely aggressive 35 percent" of anticipated levels
a decade from now. U.S. officials contend such reductions could cause
enormous disruptions to the U.S. economy, and that the United States
would never have accepted the Kyoto emissions reduction targets if
it had known that it would be prevented from making unlimited use of
market-based mechanisms such as emissions trading.
In his November 25 statement, Loy said that listening to the rhetoric
at the conference "one might think that emissions trading is some new,
half-cocked notion being offered up here for the first time. Some seem to
have forgotten that it is a fundamental feature of the Kyoto Protocol --
accepted as a legitimate means of meeting our targets."
U.S. negotiators have also insisted that nations should be awarded
credits for existing agricultural and forestry lands because they absorb
carbon dioxide and thereby offset emissions. U.S. negotiators offered --
as a major concession at the conference -- to dramatically reduce the
amount of credit the United States could claim under the Kyoto Protocol
from carbon that is absorbed by U.S. forests.
But the European Union remained strongly opposed to use of forests
as carbon sinks, insisting that such alternatives should be used only
as a supplement to actual domestic emissions reductions brought about
by switching to cleaner and more efficient fuels in automobiles and
power plants.
"Some of our negotiating parties ... chose to ignore physical realities
of our climate system, depriving parties of another important pool by
refusing them credit for carbon sequestered by their farms and forests,"
Loy said. "Again, this is not a new idea, but a fundamental feature of
the Kyoto Protocol."
Loy also reminded delegates that nations can only negotiate what
they believe can be ratified at home. "The United States is not in
the business of signing up to agreements it knows it cannot fulfill,"
he said. "We don't make promises we can't keep."
Environmental non-governmental organizations reacted differently
to the results of the conference. The Environmental Action Network, an
environmental group headquartered in the United States, charged that the
European Union passed up an excellent opportunity to achieve a strong
climate treaty.
"The proposal put forward by the U.S. delegation represented major
progress toward reducing global warming pollution," a spokesman said. "It
also balanced the interests of U.S. business and U.S. farmers with
strong pollution reduction provisions. There is no excuse for having
walked away."
But another environmental group, the World Wildlife Fund, charged that
persistent efforts to weaken the protocol by the United States, Japan,
Canada and Australia "brought the talks to the current impasse. Their
insistence on exploiting almost every loophole in the Kyoto Protocol
stalled the painfully slow progress of the last three years."