(Redirected from Vienna Climate Change Talks 2007)The
Kyoto Protocol, the world's first treaty to attempt to address
global warming by limiting
greenhouse gas emissions, is due to expire at the end of
2012. Although the treaty only came into force on
February 16,
2005, 'post-Kyoto negotiations on greenhouse gas emissions' began in earnest at the meeting of the
G8+5 Climate Change Dialogue in February 2007.
[ Politicians sign new climate pact ] Working in parallel, various bodies under the umbrella of the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change are also meeting to prepare the ground for a new agreement.
[1]
February 2007 Washington Declaration
In the non-binding '
Washington Declaration' agreed on February 16, 2007, Presidents or Prime Ministers from
Canada,
France,
Germany,
Italy,
Japan,
Russia,
United Kingdom, the
United States,
Brazil,
China,
India,
Mexico and
South Africa agreed in principle to a global
cap-and-trade system that would apply to both industrialized nations and
developing countries, which they hoped would be in place by 2009.
[2]
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Official G8+5 Climate Change Dialogue Web site''
33rd G8 summit

Leaders of the 33rd G8 summit
On
June 7,
2007, leaders at the
33rd G8 summit issued a non-binding
communiqué announcing that the G8 nations would 'aim to at least halve global
CO2 emissions by 2050'. The details enabling this to be achieved would be negotiated by environment ministers within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in a process that would also include the major
emerging economies. Groups of countries would also be able to reach additional agreements on achieving the goal outside and in parallel with the United Nations process.
[ Breakthrough on climate protection ] The G8 also announced their desire to use the proceeds from the
auction of emission rights and other financial tools to support
climate protection projects in
developing countries.
The agreement was welcomed by British Prime Minister
Tony Blair as 'a major, major step forward'.
[3] French president
Nicolas Sarkozy would have preferred a binding figure for emissions reduction to have been set.
[4] This was apparently blocked by U.S. President
George W. Bush until the other major
greenhouse gas emitting countries, like India and China, make similar commitments.
[5][6]
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Official G8 Web site''
2007 UN General Assembly plenary debate
As part of the schedule leading up to the September UN High-Level-Event, on July 31 the United Nations General Assembly opened its first-ever plenary session devoted exclusively to climate change, which also included prominent scientists and business leaders.
[ In first plenary on climate change, General Assembly to seek speedy action ] The debate, at which nearly 100 nations spoke, was scheduled to last two days but was extended for a further day to allow a greater number of 'worried nations' to describe their climate-related problems.
[ UN Climate-Change Conference Extended Extra Day ]
In his opening speech,
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged Member States to work together, stating that the time had come for 'decisive action on a global scale', and called for a 'comprehensive agreement under the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change process that tackles climate change on all fronts, including
adaptation,
mitigation,
clean technologies,
deforestation and resource mobilization'.
[ Secretary-General Challenges World Community To Tackle Climate Change Head-on ] In closing the conference
General Assembly President Haya Rashed Al-Khalifa called for an 'equitable, fair and ambitious global deal to match the scale of the challenges ahead'.
She had earlier stressed the urgency of the situation, stating that 'the longer we wait, the more expensive this will be'.
The day after the session ended, the UN launched its
new climate change web site detailing its activities relating to global warming.
[ United Nations Launches New Climate Change Internet Site ]
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Official UN web site''
2007 Vienna Climate Change Talks and Agreement
A round of climate change talks under the auspices of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) concluded in Austria in 31 August 2007 with agreement on key elements for an effective international response to climate change.
[7] [8]
A key feature of the talks was a United Nations report that showed how
energy efficiency could yield significant cuts in emissions at low cost.
The talks are meant to set the stage for a major international meeting to be held in
Bali in December.
September 2007 United Nations High-Level-Event
Alongside the meeting of the
United Nations General Assembly,
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is to hold informal high-level discussions on the post-Kyoto treaty on September 24. It is expected that these will pave the way for the United Nations Climate Change Conference, being held in
Bali in December 2007.
[ Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Announces High-Level Event on Climate Change for September ] Three
Special Envoys on Climate Change, appointed on May 1, 2007,
[ UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Appoints Special Envoys on Climate Change ] are holding discussions with various governments to define and plan the event.
In advance of the 'High-Level-Event', the Secretary-General hoped that world leaders would 'send a powerful political signal to the negotiations in Bali that “business as usual” will not do and that they are ready to work jointly with others towards a comprehensive multilateral framework for action'.
[ UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Initiatives on Climate Change ]
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Official UN Web site''
September 2007 Washington conference
It emerged on August 3, 2007, that representatives of the the
United Nations, major industrialized and developing countries are being invited by
George Bush to a conference in
Washington on September 27 and 28.
[ Bush sets global climate meeting ][ Bush Seeks Discussion of Climate Change ] Countries invited are believed to include the members of the
G8+5 (
Canada,
France,
Germany,
Italy,
Japan,
Russia,
United Kingdom,
United States,
Brazil,
China,
India,
Mexico and
South Africa), together with
South Korea,
Mexico,
Australia,
Indonesia and
South Africa. The meeting is to be hosted by
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and is envisaged as the first of several extending into 2008. Initial reaction to the news of the conference invitation was mixed.
[ Instant view:Bush sets global climate meeting ]
2007 United Nations Climate Change Conference
The 2007 United Nations Climate Change Conference will take place at the Bali International Conference Centre,
Nusa Dua, in
Bali,
Indonesia, between December 3 and December 14, 2007. Representatives from over 180 countries will be attending, together with observers from intergovernmental and nongovernmental organizations.
[ United Nations Climate Change Conference ] The conference encompasses meetings of several bodies, including the 13th Conference of the Parties to the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 13), the 3rd Meeting of the Parties to the
Kyoto Protocol (MOP 3 or CMP 3) together with other subsidiary bodies and a meeting of ministers.
Negotiations on a successor to the Kyoto Protocol are likely to dominate the conference. A meeting of environment ministers and experts held in June called on the conference to agree a road-map, timetable and 'concrete steps for the negotiations' with a view to reaching an agreement by 2009.
[ Environment leaders say U.N. summit should set timeline for post-Kyoto agreement ]
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Official UN Web site''
See also
★
Action on climate change
★
Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change
★
Tragedy of the commons
★
List of countries by carbon dioxide emissions
★
List of countries by carbon dioxide emissions per capita
★
List of countries by greenhouse gas emissions per capita
★
List of countries by ratio of GDP to carbon dioxide emissions
★
Low-carbon economy
External links
★
United Nations Climate Change web site
Policy options
★
An International Policy Architecture for the Post-Kyoto Era, S Olmstead & R Stavins,
AEI-
Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies, 2006
★
Governing Climate: The Struggle For A Global Framework Beyond Kyoto, Taishi Sugiyama (editor),
International Institute for Sustainable Development, 2005
★
Imagining a Post-Kyoto Climate Regime, Prof. Adil Najam,
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 2005
★
An analysis of a post-Kyoto climate policy model, K Anderson & A Bows,
Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, 2005
★
International Climate Efforts Beyond 2012,
Pew Center on Global Climate Change, 2005
References
1. Climate talks face international hurdles
2. Guardian Unlimited: Global leaders reach climate change agreement
3. PM hails G8 climate change step ''Guardian Unlimited'', published 2007-06-07, accessed 2007-06-07
4. Sarkozy says would have preferred climate change target to be binding, ''Forbes'', published 2007-06-07, accessed 2007-06-07
5. G8 leaders agree "substantial" greenhouse gas cuts, ''Reuters'', published 2007-06-07, accessed 2007-06-07
6. G8 Summit Declaration - US Comments May 14-1
7. http://unfccc.int/files/press/news_room/press_releases_and_advisories/application/pdf/20070831_vienna_closing_press_release.pdf
8. Report and fully Report and Ad Hoc Working Group.