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mick silver
12th December 2015, 08:12 AM
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World On Brink Of Landmark Climate Agreement In Paris
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ANGELA CHARLTON and SETH BORENSTEIN and KARL RITTER

12/12/2015 07:48 am ET | Updated 38 minutes ago
LE BOURGET, France (AP) — France presented negotiators from nearly 200 nations with what it called a "final draft" of an unprecedented climate deal to slow global warming and urged them to approve it on Saturday. The deal would slow rising temperatures and sea levels, and eventually hold man-made emissions to the levels that nature can absorb.
You can read the draft here (http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2015/cop21/eng/l09.pdf).
If the pact known as "the Paris agreement" is approved, countries would be committed to keeping the rise in global temperatures by the year 2100 compared with pre-industrial times "well below" 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) and "endeavor to limit" them even more, to 1.5 degrees Celsius. That was a key demand of poor countries ravaged by the effects of climate change and rising sea levels.
They would also be committed to limiting the amount of greenhouse gases emitted by human activity to the same levels that trees, soil and oceans can absorb naturally, beginning at some point between 2050 and 2100.
Negotiators had a few hours to analyze the draft before going into a plenary meeting for possible adoption. French President Francois Hollande, who joined the meeting Saturday to add weight to the negotiations, urged them to approve it.
"The decisive agreement for the planet is here and now," Hollande said. "France calls upon you to adopt the first universal agreement on climate."
The deal, meant to take effect in 2020, would be the first to ask all countries to join the fight against global warming, representing a sea change in the U.N. talks, which previously required only wealthy nations to reduce their emissions.
"This is a good text," said Brazilian Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira. "Brazil can accept this."
Some delegates, however, noted that the long-term temperature goals would not be achieved by the emissions targets more than 180 countries have set for themselves so far.
"We've agreed to what we ought to be doing, but no one yet has agreed to go do it," said Dennis Clare, a negotiator for the Federated States of Micronesia. "It's a whole lot of pomp, given the circumstances."
The new version removes disputed concepts like "climate neutrality" or "emissions neutrality" which had appeared in earlier drafts but met opposition from countries including China. It sets a goal of getting global greenhouse gas emissions to start falling "as soon as possible"; they have been generally rising since the industrial revolution.
It says wealthy nations should continue to provide financial support for poor nations to cope with climate change and "encouraged" other countries to pitch in on a voluntary basis. That reflects Western attempts to expand the donor base to include advanced developing countries such as China.
In what would be a victory for small island nations, the draft includes a section highlighting the losses they expect to incur from climate-related disasters that it's too late to adapt to. However, a footnote specifies that it "does not involve or provide any basis for any liability or compensation" — a key U.S. demand because it would let the Obama administration sign on to the deal without going through the Republican-led Senate.
Activists who say the agreement won't go far enough held protests across Paris on Saturday, calling attention to populations threatened by melting glaciers, rising seas and expanding deserts.
"This puts the fossil fuel industry on the wrong side of history," said Kumi Naidoo of Greenpeace. "This deal alone won't dig us out of the hole we're in."
The world has already warmed by about 1 degree Celsius since pre-industrial times, and poor low-lying nations have pushed to set a goal of limiting the rise to another half-degree on top of that.
Ben Strauss, a sea level researcher at Climate Central, said limiting warming to 1.5 degrees instead of 2 degrees could potentially cut in half the projected 280 million people whose houses will eventually be submerged by rising seas.
Still, if the more than 190 nations gathered in Paris agree to the accord, it would be a breakthrough. The U.N. has been working for more than two decades to persuade governments to work together to reduce the man-made emissions that scientists say are warming the planet.
The previous emissions treaty, the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, included only rich countries and the U.S. never signed on. The last climate summit, in Copenhagen in 2009, ended in failure when countries couldn't agree on a binding emissions pact.
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon urged delegates to adopt the draft.
"We must protect the planet that sustains us," Ban told the negotiators, adding: "The whole world is watching. Billions of people are relying on your wisdom."
The talks were initially scheduled to end Friday. U.N. climate conferences often run over time, because of the high stakes and widely differing demands and economic concerns of countries as diverse as the United States and tiny Pacific island nations.
More than 180 countries presented plans to cut or curb greenhouse gas emissions in the run-up to the conference. That in itself was a major breakthrough for the climate talks, showing almost all countries were ready to be part of the new deal after years of stalemate.
But disputes arose in Paris over how to anchor those targets in a binding international pact, with China and other major developing countries insisting on different rules for rich and poor nations.
The draft strikes a middle ground, removing a strict firewall between rich and poor nations and saying that expectations on countries to take climate action should grow as their capabilities evolve.
___
Sylvie Corbet, Seth Borenstein, Andy Drake and Matthew Lee in Le Bourget contributed to this report http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/final-draft-paris-climate_566c165ae4b0e292150e168b?8bksatt9

mick silver
12th December 2015, 08:39 AM
Why the Paris climate talks were different; agriculture and climate change; feminism goes mainstream; Russia as a distraction; talking with ISA roundup of global commentary for the Dec. 15, 2015 weekly magazine.https://s.yimg.com/lq/i/us/nws/p/csm_logo_115.jpg (http://www.csmonitor.com/) By Monitor editors 3 hours ago




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Les Échos / Paris
Why this summit on climate is different
“Given its past diplomatic failings, whether in relation to Russia or the handling of the Syrian conflict, there are reasons to worry about France’s capacity to produce a result that would measure up to expectations,” writes Jean-Francis Pecresse (http://www.worldcrunch.com/green-or-gone/earth-in-our-hands-epochal-stakes-for-paris-cop21/c25s20204/) about the Paris climate talks. “This time, however, there is room for hope. First because Paris, learning lessons from the Copenhagen failure in 2009, has had the good idea of gathering the heads of state and of government at the very start of the conference, in order to provide the political momentum necessary to put the pressure on their respective delegations. Secondly because France is not alone. It has natural allies: Germany, but also the United States and China, the world’s two main polluters, are on our side – as long as their obligations are reasonable.”
The Globe and Mail / Toronto
Don’t forget agriculture in climate talks
“As world leaders meet to discuss climate change in Paris, the headlines are being dominated by carbon taxes, clean energy, the future of the oil sands and coal. One economic sector, agriculture, is overshadowed by these more obvious polluters – which is odd, given that food and farming systems are both major emitters of greenhouse gases and particularly vulnerable to climatic shifts...,” write Evan Fraser and Sylvain Charlebois (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/rob-commentary/we-cant-talk-emissions-without-talking-agriculture/article27522561/). “Throughout history, agricultural problems have acted as catalysts that trigger widespread social and humanitarian crises.... Innovations in food science can create novel products for consumers that are nutritious and less taxing on the environment to produce.... Simultaneously, we must be much more ambitious in our development targets and establish grassroots partnerships in poorer parts of the world where food security and farm livelihoods are particularly vulnerable to climate change.”
New Zealand Herald / Auckland, New Zealand
Feminism goes mainstream in politics
“It’s becoming increasing[ly] popular to identify as feminist, even if you’re a man, and especially if you’re a politician. This year has seen a surge of concern about gender inequality, discrimination and the degraded position of women in many aspects of New Zealand life...,” writes Bryce Edwards (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=11554041). “Feminism used to be associated with the political left, but today’s feminist agendas are often pushed from the political right, including within the National Party.... The Green Party has responded with an announcement from co-leader James Shaw that ‘half of its Cabinet will be women if it enters Government....’ ”
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Deutsche Welle / Berlin
Russia is distracting from goal of defeating Islamic State
“The clash of interests is striking. Russia is backing Syrian President [Bashar al-Assad] against [Islamic State], but also against other groups, some of whom are supported by the US. Turkey, for its part, is fighting Assad and, in the past at least, has often looked the other way when IS has attacked Assad or the Kurds...,” writes Christoph Hasselbach (http://www.dw.com/en/opinion-nato-the-unwanted-war-against-is/a-18887813). “After the Paris attacks, it looked for a short time as if a very broad coalition would come together and cooperate on military action against IS. Now, it looks far less certain. No matter what happens now, NATO must resist being drawn into a conflict between member state Turkey, and Russia.”
The Guardian / London
Are we prepared to talk with Islamic State?
“[W]e have to consider the unthinkable: the probability that we will in the end have to talk to [Islamic State]. Every time we have met a terrorist group we have said we will never talk to them; but from the original IRA in 1919 to Eoka in Cyprus, the FMLN in El Salvador, the Gam in Indonesia, the [Moro Islamic Liberation Front] in the Philippines, the PLO in Palestine and the Farc in Colombia, we have ended up doing so,” writes Jonathan Powell (http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/dec/01/talk-to-isis-jihadis-ira-negotiate-military-political-solution). “People say [IS] is different and the rule doesn’t apply. Of course it is different, just as each of those groups was different from each other, but does that really mean that all the lessons we have learned from our previous encounters are no longer valid?”
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