Internet Edition. December 14, 2007, Updated: Bangladesh Time 12:00 AM 
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Emissions goals bedevil Bali climate talks

Reuters, Indonesia



Delegates at climate talks in Bali tried to break a deadlock on Thursday over U.S.-led opposition to tough guidelines for rich nations to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.

The non-binding range of 25-40 percent cuts from 1990 levels by 2020 remains in draft text but the United States, Canada, Australia and others are opposed to these numbers, angering developing nations, whose own emissions are rising rapidly.

"Most countries want a binding range for the rich nations," said a developing nation delegate on Thursday.

About 190 nations are meeting in Bali for Dec 3-14 talks to try to launch negotiations on a pact to succeed the current Kyoto Protocol, whose first phase ends in 2012.

Developing nations want rich countries to do more to cut their own emissions and say any removal of emission cuts guidelines from the final text would be a sign of bad faith.

Kyoto binds 37 industrialised nations to curb their emissions between 2008 and 2012. Poor nations are exempt from curbs.

The United Nations wants all nations to agree on a successor to Kyoto by late 2009 to give governments time to ratify the new deal and to give markets clear guidelines on how to make investments in clean energy technology.

The United States says having guidelines would prejudge the outcome of the talks and the 25-40 percent range is based on relatively little scientific study.

Chinese delegates said on Wednesday they were disappointed by a lack of progress at the talks and said emissions targets were exactly what was needed to prove rich nations were committed to fight global warming.

China also wants talks on a new global compact to be extended.

"The Chinese want talks to drag on into 2010 to give time for a new American president to come on board. Not many other countries think that's a good idea," one developing nation delegate said.

Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg told delegates the objective must be that global temperatures rise no more than 2 degrees Celsius and that global emissions peak no later than 2015.

"Future generations will judge us on our actions."

"The response from Bali must be we have the will, we have the means and we have the determination to act."

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told delegates on Wednesday the time to act was now to avoid greater extremes of drought and floods, rising seas, spread of disease and mass migration of climate refugees.

In the Arctic, ice at the North Pole melted at a record rate in the summer of 2007, the latest sign that climate change has accelerated in recent years, climate scientists said on Wednesday.

"In 2007, we had off-the-charts warming," Michael Steele, an oceanographer at the University of Washington, said at the 2007 meeting of the American Geophysical Union, where 15,000 researchers have gathered to discuss earthquakes, water resources, and climate change.

Another report adds: The average global land surface temperature this year will be the highest since records began in 1880, partly due to greenhouse gas emissions, Japan's weather agency said on Thursday.

Natural climate fluctuations contributed to the temperature rises, said the report by the Japan Meteorological Agency.

The report coincided with the Dec. 3-14 international talks on the Indonesian island of Bali to discuss a new climate treaty to succeed the Kyoto Protocol after 2012, but it was not presented there.

The average land surface temperature from January to November this year was higher than in the past in all regions except for southern South America, the report said.

It said the ocean surface temperature was higher in most areas except for the eastern Pacific Ocean near the equator.

The global average land surface temperature in 2007 was forecast to reach 0.67 degrees Celsius above the mean average temperature of the 30-year period from 1971 to 2000.

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