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Climate change deal - USA unlikely to commit

Aught3

New Member
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It's official: the organisers of the Copenhagen climate conference conceded last weekend that it cannot deliver a final, legally binding deal. Danish prime minister Lars Là¸kke Rasmussen, the conference host, is hoping for a "political deal", followed by a legal one in 2010. The question now is how specific the political deal will be.

Speaking at a meeting of Asian leaders in Singapore, Rasmussen said the Copenhagen agreement should be "precise on specific commitments and binding on countries committing to reach certain targets. We need the commitments. We need the figures. We need the action." His climate minister, Connie Hedegaard, says it is "most important that the US commit to bring specific numbers to Copenhagen".

Will it? That's in the balance. Though keen to agree a climate treaty, President Barack Obama is thought to be reluctant to make promises that Congress will not let him keep, as the then vice-president Al Gore did in Kyoto in 1997. He wants the climate change bills before Congress to pass before making any firm pledges. This will not happen before Copenhagen.

http://www.newscientist.com/article...ge-a-deal.html?DCMP=NLC-nletter&nsref=dn18164

With the political crap going on with health-care in the US, I doubt 2010 will be the year for considering carbon emissions either.
 
arg-fallbackName="Squawk"/>
They will never get a legally binding deal. No politician will ever commit to anything with legal implications if they have any choice in the matter. What you end up with is much hand waving and misdirection, lots of empty promises that sound good and fail to deliver.

I fear the only action taken will be retrospective when it comes to climate change, it will only happen when something that the world leaders value is properly threatened. Millions of people in Bangladesh, to name one vulnerable area, do not come into that catagory.
 
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