PRAGUE, April 11 (Xinhua) -- The participants in a two-day international
conference on climate protection that opened in Prague on Wednesday discussed
how to coordinate efforts by experts, NGOs and politicians after 2012 when the
targets of the Kyoto Protocol expire.
Czech senator Bedrich Moldan, former Czech environment minister, said that
the Czech Republic will certainly meet the protocol's targets.
"Our country has much less greenhouse gas emissions than in the past years
thanks to a big decrease in industrial production after1989," Moldan who took
part in the conference said.
The Czech emissions showed a 30-percent drop, he said.
However, Moldan added that the country pays only little attention to
climate protection and energy consumption due to this drop.
Moldan pointed out that Czech economy needs one-third more energy than
advanced old EU countries to achieve a given GDP level.
The European Union's executive arm cut the annual allocation of emission
allowances for Czech to 86.8 million tons, 14.8 percent lower than what Prague
had asked for last month.
The EU Emissions Trading Scheme, based on national allocation of emission
allowances, ensures that EU and its member states meet their emission
commitments under the Kyoto Protocol to cut greenhouse gas releases by 8 percent
below 1990 levels by 2012.