Archive for June 2nd, 2008

New round of climate talks open Monday with big agenda, small hopes

BONN, Germany — Climate change experts from around the world will get their first chance this week to discuss the nuts and bolts of a new global warming agreement designed to take effect after 2012.

The meeting builds on a landmark accord reached last December on the Indonesian island of Bali which, for the first time, held out the promise that the United States, China and India will join a co-ordinated effort to control carbon emissions blamed for the unnatural heating of the Earth.
The two-week conference, drawing some 2,000 delegates from more than 160 countries and dozens of agencies, begins Monday.

The Bali conference agreed to conclude a new climate change treaty by December 2009. Another conference four months later in Bangkok adopted a negotiating timetable.

In Bonn, “the real work is now only beginning,” says Yvo de Boer, the United Nations’ top climate change official.

Scientists say the world’s carbon emissions must peak within the next 10 to 15 years and then fall by half by mid-century to avoid potentially catastrophic changes in weather patterns, a rise in sea levels that would threaten coastal cities and the mass extinction of plants and animals.

The new climate change pact will succeed the first phase of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which requires 37 industrialized countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions an average of five per cent below 1990 levels by 2012.

The United States is the only industrialized country not to have ratified Kyoto. Negotiators hope Washington’s consent to the Bali “action plan” marked the end of its hostility toward working with other countries to contain global warming.

“Their attitude, their activity, has changed very much in the recent year. It’s really a big change,” said Andrej Kranjc of Slovenia, the head of the European Union delegation.

Still, the administration of President George W. Bush rejects specific and mandatory targets to reduce emissions over the next dozen years. And countries such as India and China question why they should accept limits on their development without commitments from the U.S., the world’s largest polluter.

Delegates say such major decisions must wait for the new U.S. administration next January.

“It’s unlikely we are going to make lot of progress this year because we need strong signals from the U.S., and that’s not going happen until the election,” said Ian Fry, the delegate from the tiny Pacific country of Tuvalu.

But time is pressing.

The basic outline of the post-Kyoto agreement should be ready by next summer to prepare for the critical December conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, where the new pact should be adopted, de Boer says.

That allows negotiators just six months after the next U.S. president takes office to negotiate a complex, multifaceted and hugely expensive treaty.

Delegates in Bonn will begin work on how to help developing countries adapt to anticipated changes in their climate, on transferring new technologies to help them avoid hefty carbon emissions as they expand their economies, and on how to raise the trillions of dollars required over the next decades to curb climate change.

Each objective faces a multitude of obstacles.

Governments cannot commit to transferring technologies that belong to private companies, which are protected by intellectual property rights, for example.

Small countries need satellite monitoring, especially of deforestation, which they cannot afford without help. The costs of installing carbon-storage facilities on power stations, once it becomes technically feasible, will be out of reach to all but the richest.

Proposed “adaptation funds” for developing countries are plagued by questions of how money will be generated, who will control it and how it will be allocated.

Some countries favour a levy on airplane tickets and maritime transport to be deposited in a special account earmarked for developing countries.

Source: http://canadianpress.google.com/

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Candidates promise to make culture a priority

Irawaty Wardany, The Jakarta Post, Denpasar

Candidates for the upcoming gubernatorial election pledged to preserve Bali’s cultural heritage to a gathering of the island’s artists and writers on Saturday.

The gathering took place in Denpasar’s Werddhi Budaya Art Center during the opening ceremony of a joint art exhibition. Titled “Consciousness Entity” the exhibition, showing until June 7, set to remind the island’s politicians about the aspirations of the Balinese people. The exhibition committee gave each candidate a chance to discuss their cultural policies.

Cokorda Budi Suryawan, a candidate endorsed by the Golkar party and the Bali People Coalition (KRB), an umbrella of several minor parties, pledged to establish the Bali Arts Council (DKD) if elected, which would be tasked with designing a cultural development policy.

“The Council will comprise respected artists and public figures and its programs will be financed with the provincial budget,” he said.

Made Mangku Pastika, a candidate supported by the island’s largest political power, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI Perjuangan), told the audience the cultural policy and development should not be managed in a top-down bureaucratic style.

“We will provide an atmosphere, in which the provincial administration will extend various assistance to the artists without compromising the artists’ aesthetic integrity and their freedom of expression,” he said.

The third candidate, I Gde Winasa, who is backed up by a coalition of minor parties known as The Bali Awakening Coalition (KKB), didn’t attend the event. He was represented by his running mate, IGB Alit Putra, who conveyed his concern about the poor financial remuneration many Balinese artists received, before performing a song titled Cedil Bingung (Confused Cedil) to the amazement of the audience.

The candidates each wrote down their promises on a piece of canvas before signing them.

Head of the Bali General Election Commission (KPUD) AA Oka Wisnumurti praised the event as a testament of the transperancy of the the island’s political process.

“This event proves that here in Bali, each group of constituents can invite candidates, ask them to speak about their agenda and ask them to make a promise, a written one for that matter, to fulfill that agenda,” he said.

Wayan Suardika, an arts writer and one of the exhibition’s organizers, said she believed the event would connect politicians with artists.

“There is always a hope to strengthen artists’ relationship with the government, even though without support from the government we are still able to move forward and get noticed by the international world,” he said.

A member of the exhibit committee, Wayan Redika, said there had been a gap between artists and politicians, which the exhibition had sought to close.

“We, the artists, emphasize more on our room for creation and we never realize that it has built some kind of gap between arts and politics,” he said.

The exhibition features the works of 42 artists, including several celebrated artists, such as Wianta, Gunarsa, Djirna, Erawan and Mandra.

Source: The Jakarta Post

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