Special Report:
President Hu attends outreach session
of G8 Summit
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Chinese President Hu Jintao (Front)
attends a group meeting with leaders of Brazil, India, Mexico and South
Africa in Berlin, capital of Germany, June 7, 2007. (Xinhua/Liu
Jiansheng) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BERLIN, June 7 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu
Jintao on Thursday called for upholding the principle of "common but
differentiated responsibilities" for developing countries in tackling climate
change.
"We should work together to make sure the
international community upholds the goals and framework established in the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and its Kyoto Protocol and
the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities," Hu said while
addressing a meeting of the leaders of five developing countries -- China,
Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa.
The leaders met on the sidelines of the outreach
session of the Group of Eight (G8) summit slated for Friday in Heiligendamm in
northern Germany.
Developing countries should also carry out "active,
practical and effective cooperation," Hu said.
"Considering both historical responsibility and
current capability, developed countries should take the lead in reducing carbon
emission and help developing countries ease and adapt to climate change," he
said.
"For developing countries, achieving economic growth
and improving the lives of our people are top priorities," he said. "At the same
time, we also need to make every effort to pursue sustainable development in
accordance with our national conditions."
Climate change, which could cause swelling sea levels
and climate swings, has become a major issue at the G8 summit, which runs from
Wednesday to Friday.
Kyoto Protocol, a document signed in Japan in 1997
that requires industrialized countries to cut greenhouse gas emission by 5
percent from 1990 levels, will expire in 2012. Parties concerned hope to launch
negotiations for its replacement at an early date.
Skepticism, however, was evident at the summit for
reaching a fixed, quantifiable targets for reducing the greenhouse gas emission.
Before the summit, China, as a developing country,
released a master plan outlining steps it would take to boost overall energy
efficiency in 2010 by 20 percent over the 2005 level.
Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change, said in an interview on Tuesday that the Chinese
plan is "very encouraging."
"It really is an indication that the Chinese
government sees acting on climate change as being part of a larger development
agenda," he said.
The Chinese president said at the meeting China gives
high priority to "environmental protection and sustainable development."
"We follow the scientific thinking of development
which is people-oriented and calls for all-round, coordinated and sustainable
development," he said.
In addition to taking these steps at home, China is
ready to carry out extensive cooperation with the international community,
including other developing countries, Hu said.
"China is ready to enhance exchanges with other
countries and draw upon their strength in the framework of South-South
cooperation and do what it can to help other developing countries," he said.
Related:
Chinese president calls on
developing nations to jointly meet challenges
Leaders of 5 developing
nations meet on world economy, climate change

