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UN's Ban urges China to step up on climate change
2009-07-24
BEIJING (AFP) - UN chief Ban Ki-moon called on China Friday to exercise greater leadership in world efforts to curb climate change, saying a new global framework deal cannot be reached this year without Beijing. "Without China there can be no success this year on a new global climate framework deal," Ban said during a speech to launch a programme promoting environmentally friendly lighting in China. "But with China there is an enormous potential for the world to seal a deal in Copenhagen." Ban will oversee a UN summit in the Danish capital in December aimed at hammering out a new climate change pact to cut the greenhouse gas emissions that are blamed for global warming. While Ban stopped short of explicitly urging China to commit to new emissions curbs, he called on Beijing to seize the initiative. "Strong signals from China on mitigation actions announced before Copenhagen will help push the negotiating process forward. They can also direct responsibility to other key countries to do more," he said. China and other developing nations are opposed to any compulsory cuts in their emissions, saying the responsibility for solving the problem rests with the developed countries that have polluted for so long. In his talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, Ban reiterated his call for stronger leadership, but the Chinese leaders appeared non-committal. "Your global leadership role in addressing the international financial and economic crisis ... has been widely appreciated by the international community," Ban told Hu. "We hope so see such a continuing global leadership role." According to the China News Service, Wen repeated China's stance that developed nations must do more. "The Chinese government supports the leading role of the United Nations in pushing forward international cooperation on climate change," the report quoted Wen as saying. "Developed nations must earnestly help developing nations in funding, technology and energy construction. This will be beneficial to realising sustainable global development." In his speech, Ban noted that China had made "enormous" progress on promoting the use of green energy sources such as solar and wind power and urged further efforts to limit the country's reliance on the use of heavily polluting coal. Coal makes up about 70 percent of China's energy consumption. Ban said coal burning accounts for 85 percent of the nation's carbon emissions. There are mounting expectations that China will propose some sort of limits on its own emissions due to the international pressure and domestic concerns over the effects of climate change on the country, said Greenpeace China's Li Yan. "We are quite confident that China will come up with some sort of new proposal," said Li, the environment group's China climate change and energy campaigner. However, she said the form those limits could take remained unclear. Greenpeace is calling for China to commit to reducing emissions growth by 15-30 percent by 2020, she said. State press reports this year have said China was prepared to commit to improved energy efficiency as its contribution to the talks, but no details of such targets have been set out. Ban stressed it was in China's interest to curb emissions, saying climate change would likely increase desertification in the country, cut crop yields and melt Himalayan glaciers -- with harmful effects for China and its neighbours. "China has long been the world's fastest-growing major economy," Ban said. "It is also a leading emitter of greenhouse gases, and it is one of the countries most vulnerable to the impact of climate change." The US Congress is considering legislation that would reduce US greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020. But China has said such cuts are not enough.
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