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GLENEAGLES, Britain, July 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Leaders of
the Group of Eight (G8), concluding their three-day summit in Gleneagles,
central Scotland on Friday, seemed to hold back on the way to tackle climate
change as their declaration lacks certain targets or timetable for carbon
reduction.
They understood that "climate change is a serious and
long-term challenge that has the potential to affect every part of the globe."
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| British Prime Minister Tony Blair
reading a statement at the conclusion of the G8 summit receives applause
from other G8 leaders and African leaders July 8.
(xinhua/AFP) | In the
text, the leaders acknowledged that increased need and use of energy from fossil
fuel, and other human activities, contribute in large part to global warming.
They reached consensus to take urgent action to
reduce greenhouse gas emission.
"While uncertainty remain in our understanding of
climate science, we know enough to act now to put ourselves on a path to slow
and, as the science justifies, stop and then reverse the growth of greenhouse
gas," said the declaration.
But the statement only mentioned the Kyoto Protocol
once which obligates the developed countries to cut greenhouse five gas emission
5.7 percent less than the level of 1990 by 2012.
The UN pact was signed by seven G8 countries except
the United States who opposed it for economic reasons.
At a press conference after the summit, British Prime
Minister Tony Blair said "we are not going to negotiate certain targets. We will
never ensure the US to adopt the Kyoto Protocol."
He put climate change, along with Africa, the two
main issues for the summit agenda.
Environmentalists blamed his failure to get the
United States lined up with other seven countries on Kyoto Protocol.
"Tony Blair has not succeeded in bringing the US back
to the table. Instead it (the statement) highlights the divisions between
President (Bush) and the rest of the world on tackling climate change," said a
statement released from Green peace on Friday.
"This is a very disappointing finale. The G8 have
delivered nothing new here and the text conveys no sense of the scale or urgency
of the challenge," said Tony Juniper, Vice Chair of Friends of the Earth.
The leaders did pledge to take efforts to improve
energy efficiency, invest in cleaner energy technology and cooperate withe
merging economies.
China, India, Brazil, Mexico and South Africa, which
attended the summit, issued a joint statement Thursday endorsing the Kyoto
Protocol and urging developed countries such as the United States to "take the
lead in international action to combat climate change by fully implementing
their obligations of reducing emissions." Enditem |