Is China poor? Key question at climate talks
Is China a developing country?
Key question unresolved in latest
round of climate talks
By Karl Ritter, Associated Press
FILE-
Smoke billows from a chimney of a heating plant as the sun sets in Beijing in
this file photo dated Monday, Feb. 13, 2012. U.N. climate talks being held in
Bonn, Germany, are in gridlock Thursday May 24, 2012, as a rift between rich
and poor countries risked undoing some of the advances made last year in the
two-decade-long effort to control carbon emissions from fast-growing economies
like China and India as well as developed industrialized nations that
scientists say are overheating the planet.
BONN,
Germany (AP) -- Another round of U.N. climate talks closed without resolving
how to share the burden of curbing man-made global warming, mainly because
countries don't agree on who is rich and who is poor.
China
wants to maintain a decades-old division between developed and developing
countries, bearing in mind that, historically, the West has released most of
the heat-trapping gases that scientists say could cause catastrophic
changes in
climate.
But the
U.S. and Europe insisted during the two-week talks that ended Friday in Bonn
that the system doesn't reflect current economic realities and must change as
work begins on a new global climate pact set to be completed in 2015.
"The
notion that a simple binary system is going to be applicable going forward is
no longer one that has much relevance to the way the world currently
works," U.S. chief negotiator Jonathan
Pershing said.
Countries
like Qatar and Singapore are wealthier than the U.S. per capita but are still
defined as developing countries under the classification used in the U.N.
talks. So is China, the world's second largest economy.
Finding a
new system that better reflects the world today, while also acknowledging the
historical blame for greenhouse gas emissions, is the biggest challenge facing
the U.N. process as it seeks a global response to climate change.
"That
is a fundamental issue," said Henrik Harboe, Norway's chief climate
negotiator. "Some want to keep the old division while we want to look at
it in a more dynamic way."
The U.N.
climate talks are based on the premise that industrialized countries must take
the lead on climate change by committing to reducing emissions of carbon
dioxide and other greenhouse gases. They are also expected to provide money to
help poor countries grow in a sustainable way and to protect the most
vulnerable nations from rising sea levels, droughts and other consequences of a
warming world
Disputes
on how to categorize countries going forward was behind much of the procedural
wrangling that slowed down the talks in Bonn. Delegates failed to agree on an
agenda until the last day, leaving most of the work for a bigger summit in
Qatar in November.
A separate
dispute between developing countries delayed the appointment of officials to
steer the talks. That stalemate was also unlocked on the
last day.
The slow
pace frustrated climate activists who fear that there won't be enough political
will to rein in emissions to avoid dangerous levels of warming in coming
decades.
"The
talk here doesn't match the action that science says is required," said
Mohamed Adow, senior climate change adviser at Christian Aid.
China's
lead negotiator Su Wei told The Associated Press that the proposed new deal,
which would have binding commitments for all countries after 2020, must be
based on the principle of "common but differentiated responsibility"
enshrined in previous climate agreements.
"That
means we still would continue the current division between developed and
developing countries," Su said.
He said
China is still a developing country because if you look at wealth per capita,
it barely makes the world's top 100. More than 100 million Chinese live below
the poverty line, which Beijing has defined as about $1 a day.
Still,
Western officials say China's fast-growing energy needs and rising emissions
mean it can no longer be off the hook in climate negotiations.
"We
need to move into a system which is reflecting modern economic realities,"
EU negotiator Christian Pilgaard Zinglersen said.
In the
early 1950s, China accounted for just 2 percent of global emissions while the
U.S. accounted for more than 40 percent, according to Climate Analytics, a
climate research group based in Potsdam, Germany.
Today
China's share of global emissions exceeds 25 percent, while the U.S. share has
fallen toward
20 percent.
China and
its supporters reject blame for stalling the climate talks, saying it is the
U.S. and other developed nations that are unwilling to live up to their
obligations to cut carbon emissions.
The U.S.
refused to join the only binding accord to limit emissions — the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol — partly because it didn't include China.
Seyni
Nafo, spokesman for a group of African countries in the climate talks, noted
that the U.S. also said that joining Kyoto would harm the U.S. economy. Years
later, the U.N. climate effort still has little support in the U.S. Congress,
which includes outspoken climate skeptics.
"We
are hoping that they will get on board this time, which is not a given,"
Nafo said.
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