|
LONDON, Nov. 1 (Xinhuanet) -- Energy and environment
ministers from 20 nations Tuesday opened a new round of talks in London with
focus on curbing climate change through cleaner technology.
Opening the so-called G20 meeting, UK environment secretary Margaret Beckett said the timetable on climate
change was being dictated by nature, not politics.
The two-day meeting brings the G8 group of
industrialized countries alongside some developing nations such as China, India,
Mexico and Brazil.
"Technology is essential to make the transition to a
low-carboneconomy and targets ... have a vital role to play in driving forward
that progress," Beckett told delegates.
"There is more evidence that the oceans are warming,
that a long-term reduction in arctic ice cover is accelerating and that the
strength of hurricanes has increased in the last 30 years," she said.
The discussions follow the climate agreement drawn up
at July'sG8 summit in Gleneagles, which emphasized the importance of
climate-friendly technologies such as clean coal, nuclear power and renewables.
"We face a timetable that is driven by nature,
science and by the predicted effect of climate change on our world, not by our
own negotiating processes," Beckett added.
As the rotating presidency of the G8 this year,
Britain put climate change on the top of agenda of the bloc of wealthiest
nations plus Russia.
Prime Minister Tony Blair hopes to break the deadlock
over the Kyoto Protocol, which US government has refused to ratify for economic
reasons.
Blair said cuts in greenhouse gas emissions can only
be achieved by establishing an initiative that includes the United States.
Enditem |