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French President Nicolas Sarkozy (L)
delivers a speech at Tsinghua University in Beijing, capital of China,
Nov, 27, 2007. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- French President Nicolas
Sarkozy on Tuesday called on China to join a new global pact to halve greenhouse
gas emissions by 2050 and avoid the "dramatic consequences" of global warming.
In a speech at Beijing's Tsinghua University, Sarkozy
said global warming posed a major environmental threat and urged China to take
the lead with France against climate change for the sake of future generations.
"We are not asking you to give up your development,"
he told an audience of students. "Make your development an example for the
world."
He said the Chinese government had pledged in its
11th Five-year Plan to take necessary measures for sustainable development and
the preservation of natural resources, with plans to reduce energy consumption
by 20 percent by 2010.
China could take the advantage of its scientific
education, its planning ability as well as its power and reputation in the
world.
"I propose that China join a new global contract, an
ecological and economic New Deal to influence immediately, profoundly and
sustainably, in accordance with its size and power, the modes of production and
energy consumption," he said.
"Your country can make this strategic decision."
Negotiations on the new pact, to succeed the UN Kyoto
Protocol, will begin at a UN conference on climate change in Bali, Indonesia,
next week.
Sarkozy urged both developed and developing countries
to shoulder their responsibility to contribute under the principles of the pact.
China and France shared similar views on the
relationship between man and nature, Sarkozy said.
The two sides had agreed to establish bilateral
consultation to employ all possible resources and technologies to protect the
world environment.
Sarkozy also stressed that France had employed a
"decarbonized" production style, which it could share with China, that had
resulted in France having Europe's lowest emissions of carbon-dioxide.
A day earlier, China and France signed a joint
statement on responding to climate change and the establishment of a partnership
between the two countries in this regard.
Sarkozy arrived in Beijing on Sunday afternoon for his first state visit to China since taking office in May.
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